Career & personal life
Antoine Coysevox became a sculptor of monuments, groups, busts and bas-reliefs. He was born and baptized on 29 September 1640 in the parish of Saint Nizier, in Lyon as: “Anthoine, fils à Pierre Quoyzeveau, maistre menuisier, et à Ysabeau Morel, sa famme, …” (Anthoine, son of Pierre Quoyzeveau, master chair-maker, and of Ysabeau Morel, his wife, …. The artist signed until 1670 with the spelling Anthoine Quoyzeveau in the aforementioned act of his baptism, and then adopted the name Antoine Coysevox, different from his name at birth. Around the age of seventeen he came to Paris to perfect his skills in sculpture. He became a student of Louis Relambert, whose niece Marguerite Quillerier he married in 1666, daughter of Noël Quillerier who was a painter and a valet to the king. The same year Coysevox became already the king’s sculptor and executed some sculptures for the Louvre. Ten months after the wedding, his young wife died and made him decide to accept the offer by the bishop of Strasbourg, cardinal William Egon of Furstenberg (1629-1704) to decorate his palace in Saverne (Alsace). He came back after about four years in 1671 to Paris, but in the end returned to Lyon. In 1676 he was admitted to the Académie française and appointed assistant professor. In 1677 he returned definitively to Paris where he became professor that same year. He then married Claude Bourdy (or Bourdict), sister of the sculptor Pierre Bourdy, working for the king. Twelve children were born of this particularly fertile commitment. After being deputy, Coysevox became rector of the Académie française in 1694. In 1698, he was granted a licence for housing in the Louvre. From 1702 to 1705 he was director of the Académie française and in 1716 he became chancellor.
Two famous equestrian sculptures: La renommée (du Roi) (Fame) and Mercure (Mercury)
Coysevox was extremely productive in France and worked for the castles of Versailles, Trianon, Marly-le-Roi, Saint-Cloud and Paris. He represented eminently the art of sculpture of the period and the classic style.
He received a commission in 1698 for a group of two equestrian statues to honour the glory of king Louis XIV. They were carved in Carrara marble in 1701-1702, and placed on either side of the upper part of the basin at the entrance to the park of the Château de Marly in Marly-le-Roi. The sculptures were transported to the west entrance of the Tuileries Gardens in 1719. In 1986 they were moved to the Louvre museum and replaced by replicas.
Political iconography
After the signing of the Treaty of Ryswick in 1697, and the return of prosperity to France, Louis XIV entrusted Jules Hardouin-Mansart, his Superintendent of Buildings, to commission splendid statuary for the park at the Château de Marly. Antoine Coysevox was chosen to sculpt two equestrian groups in Carrara marble, to adorn either side of the balustrade overlooking the basin of the château. The resulting sculptures represented La renommée (du Roi) (Fame) and Mercure (Mercury), each astride the legendary winged horse Pegasus, symbolizing the king's peacetime and wartime prestige. Both horses rear above military trophies representing the king's victories. Pegasus, the symbol of poetry, is guided by Mercury, the divine messenger and god of trade, symbolizing the benefits of the return to peace. The trophies under Mercury’s rearing horse include a shield evoking the Spanish Succession, with Minerva, the goddess of war, presenting the portrait of Philip V to the Spanish people. The statue of Fame, wearing a laurel wreath and holding an olive branch, is sounding the trumpet of truth to proclaim the king's warlike strength. The trophies here include a shield adorned with a winged Victory holding a palm and crown. The lion skin evokes Hercules, the mythological hero of legendary strength, to whom the king was often compared.
Technical prowess
Coysevox's work was a technical masterpiece in terms of size (such large marble sculptures had never yet been made in France), speed, and skill. The groups were made from monolithic blocks, with no joins, by carving into the mass and clearing the projecting parts. Marble is a fragile material that can easily be broken by an impact or intrinsic flaw, but Coyesvox took the risk of clearing frail pieces such as the long, tapering stem of the trumpet, supported by the figure's upraised arm. He completed his sculpture in barely two years (1701-1702), proudly drawing attention to this feat in the text engraved on the rocks: “les deux groupes ont esté faites en deux ans” (“both sculptures were realised in two years”.
A personal creation
Coysevox could also be proud of having invented the model for this sculpture. Previous sculptors under Louis XIV had worked according to the instructions or drawings of painter Charles Lebrun (1619-1690), then architect Jules Hardouin-Mansart (1646-1708), who were successively responsible for fine arts policy. Although Coysevox's composition remained faithful to the harmonious art of Versailles and gave greater importance to the front view, these dynamic groups also marked a baroque inflection in court art with the riders, clearly outlined against the sky, balancing on their rearing horses above their trophies of arms.
Ca. 1810-1830
Probably made in Paris
Patinated bronze
Not signed
H. 61 cm, W. 44 cm, D. 17 cm
This patinated bronze sculpture Fame is a reduced replica of the majestic statue in Carrara marble La Renommée (du Roi) by Antoine Coysevox created in 1701-1702. It shows Fame wearing a laurel wreath on her head, holding an olive branch and playing the trumpet of truth to proclaim the king's martial’s strength. She sits astride the winged horse Pegasus leaping over a shield adorned with a winged Victory holding a palm and crown, a lion pelt evoking the mythological hero of legendary strength Hercules - to whom the king was often compared - and armour. The equestrian group rests on a rectangular base. Fame together with Mercury (Mercure), also astride the legendary winged horse Pegasus, had been commissioned by the French king Louis XIV (1638-1715) in 1698 - to memorialize his glory - for the upper part of the Bassin de l'Abreuvoir at the entrance to the park of the Château de Marly. In 1719 they were moved to the western terrace of the Tuileries Gardens but were more recently replaced by replicas in 1986. The originals are since then exhibited in the Musée du Louvre.
Literature: Bénézit, E. (vol. 4) (1999), Dictionnaire critique et documentaire des peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs et graveurs de tous les temps et de tous les pays par un groupe d’écrivains spécialistes français et étrangers, Paris: Éditions Gründ, p. 56-58; Bresc, G. & Pingeot, A. (vol. 2) (1986), Sculptures des jardins du Louvre, du Carrousel et des Tuileries, Paris: Éditions de la Réunion des musées nationaux, 1986, p. 132-138; Les Chevaux de Marly, (exhibition) Musée-promenade de Marly-le-Roi, Louveciennes, 19.10 - 15.12.1985, 1985.
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