Selections from the Nasher
Museum of Art
Virginal
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Vestal Virgin
Clodion
Circa 1799
Terra cotta
17 1/2 inches
Gift of Mary D.B.T. Semans and James
H. Semans, in
honor of Mary Duke Biddle |
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The eighteenth-century French artist
Clodion (born Claude Michel) was a master of small-scale
sculpture--mostly in terra cotta, although he also worked
in bronze and marble. Clodion was a contemporary of his better-known
colleague Jean-Antoine Houdon, with whom he shared a studio
for a time.
Clodion was famous for his adept and often elegant small-scale
renditions of classical themes and figures--Galatea, Zephyrus
and Flora, Bacchus and Ariadne, satyrs, bacchantes, and putti--inspired
by antique sculpture and by the works of artists such as
Michelangelo and Gian Lorenzo Bernini. He also created impressive
works on a larger scale, including a masterful marble sculpture
of the Baron de Montesquieu and a relief on the Arc de Triomphe
du Carrousel in Paris.
This terra cotta statuette represents a Vestal Virgin carrying
garlands to be used in a sacrifice and a vase that was probably
intended to hold sacrificial oil. The Hermitage museum in
St. Petersburg, Russia, has a similar figure by Clodion in
its collection. The Nasher's small, lyrical virgin is typical
of Clodion's later work, in the 1790s, when he began to move
from his signature rococo style toward the neoclassical style
then gaining ascendancy.
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