Jean-Antoine Houdon
French, 1741 - 1828
He returned to Paris in 1768, and two years later, presented a reclining figure, Morpheus, as his reception piece for membership in the Académie Royale. He was accepted by the Académie in 1771, and became a full member in 1777. Houdon went on to portray many of the key figures of the Enlightenment. In addition to George Washington, his sitters included Voltaire, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Denis Diderot, Frédéric Melchior Grimm, Empress Catherine the Great of Russia, the Marquis de Lafayette, Benjamin Franklin, and Thomas Jefferson. Houdon’s portrait busts of these subjects –produced in plaster, terracotta, and marble—exhibit a remarkable degree of technical mastery. These portrait busts won acclaim for their extraordinary verisimilitude-- sometimes aided by the use of either life or death masks of his subjects—and for expression or gestures which adroitly conveyed the personality of the subjects. In 1786 he married Marie-Ange Langlois, and the couple had three daughters. Houdon began to teach at the Académie royale in 1792, and at the École des Beaux-Arts from 1805, and in 1809 he received the Légion d’Honneur.
Person TypeIndividual
American, 1818 - 1871
Swedish/American, 1751 - 1811