Corneille Van Clève | |||||||||
Birth Place: | Paris, Kingdom of France | ||||||||
Death Place: | Paris, Kingdom of France | ||||||||
Education: | François Anguier | ||||||||
Known For: | Sculpture | ||||||||
Spouse: | Marie-Antoinette De Meaux de Vallicre | ||||||||
Children: | Josse Van Clève | ||||||||
Awards: | Prix de Rome (1671) | ||||||||
Patrons: | Louis XIV, Louis XV | ||||||||
Module: |
| ||||||||
Baptised: | 10 June 1646 |
Corneille Van Clève (10 June 1646 – 31 December 1735) was a French sculptor.
Clève was born in Paris in 1646 to a family of Flemish goldsmiths and baptized on 10 June that year. His grandfather, a merchant goldsmith, immigrated to Paris from Flanders and was naturalized by King Henry IV in 1606.[1] Cleve studied under French sculptor François Anguier and received the Prix de Rome scholarship in 1671.[2]
After spending several years there at the French Academy in Rome, as well as three years in Venice, Clève returned to France in 1678.[3] On 26 April 1681, he was formally accepted to the Académie de Peinture et de Sculpture upon submission of a marble statue of the cyclops Polyphemus.[4] Clève would be director of the Académie from 1711 to 1714.[5] Clève enjoyed the patronage of both King Louis XIV and Louis XV, earning the King's pension until his death and sculpting numerous statues for the Palace at Versailles.
Clève married Marie-Antoinette De Meaux de Vallicre, half-sister of the famous goldsmith, on 31 January 1682. She died in May 1683, just a few days after giving birth to their only son, Josse. He went on to become a sculptor, working in his father's workshop and earning several awards from the Académie, but would die on 4 June 1711.
Clève died during the night of 30-31 December 1732 following a long bout of illness that begun in April 1730.