Jean-Louis Couasnon

Jean-Louis Couasnon
Born 1707
Culan, Cher, France
Died 1802
Nationality French
Occupation Sculptor

Jean-Louis Couasnon (1747-1802) was a French sculptor who specialized in portraits of living people.

Life

Jean-Louis Couasnon was born in Culan, Cher, in 1747.[1] He studied under the sculptor Jean-Baptiste d'Huez. In 1777 he was working for the Menus-Plaisirs du Roi, for whom he made painted cartoons of Louis XVI of France and Marie Antoinette He exhibited at the Salon de la Correspondance in 1779 and in 1785. He exhibited at the Salons du Louvre from 1795 to 1802. Couasnon died in 1802.[2]

Style

Couasnon specialized in portraiture, particularly of children, and rendered their expressions with great sweetness and resemblance. His work recalls that of Jean-Antoine Houdon.[2] Couasnon made a bust of Alexandrine Émilie Brogniart (b. 1780), daughter of the architect and designer Alexandre-Théodore Brongniart, when she was aged four.[3] Houdon made portraits of Émilie's older siblings. Couasnon rendered the eyes in same way, with bowl-shaped irises and deeply carved pupils, but in contrast to Houdon's masterful work the hair is stiff and the dress is complicated.[4] His portrait of the poet Jean-Baptiste de Santeul is said to be his masterpiece.[1]

Selected works

References

Citations

Sources

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