Satyress and Child

1803
(French, 1738–1814)
Diameter: 30.7 cm (12 1/16 in.)
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Location: not on view

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Did You Know?

An invention of European artists of the post-Roman period, a satyress is the female equivalent of the male satyr in classical antiquity. Part human and part goat or horse, the satyress can be recognized by her animal legs and hoofs.

Description

Born in Nancy to a family of artists, Clodion was one of the leading French sculptors of the ancien régime and Napoleonic era. He went to Paris to study sculpture in 1755 and worked in Rome from 1767 to 1771. Although inspired by the art of classical antiquity, as seen in the mythological subject of this terracotta relief, Clodion continued to model forms with a softness and delicacy reflective of his training during the Rococo period.
Satyress and Child

Satyress and Child

1803

Clodion

(French, 1738–1814)
France, early 19th Century

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