Denis Foyatier Explained

Denis Foyatier
Birth Date:1793 9, df=yes
Birth Place:Bussières, Loire
Death Place:Paris
Nationality:French
Field:Sculpture
Training:École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts, Paris
French Academy in Rome
Movement:Neoclassicism
Works:Spartacus

Denis Foyatier (21 September 1793 at Bussières, Loire  - 19 November 1863 at Paris) was a French sculptor in the neoclassical style.

Biography

Foyatier was the child of a family of modest means (his father was a weaver and later a farmer at Bezin, a hamlet near Bussières, Loire). He started by working on religious figures, while taking a design course at Lyon. In 1817, he entered the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts ("National Higher School for Arts and Crafts") in Paris. In 1819 he exhibited his first pieces and, aged 26, was awarded a scholarship for the French Academy in Rome at the Villa Médicis.

At the Villa Médicis he created the mould for his piece Spartacus, which is very well known. A Royal Command of 1828 for a production in marble made him famous.

After a brilliant career as a sculptor and painter, he died on 19 November 1863 and is buried in the Petit-Clamart cemetery in a suburb of Paris.

Some of Foyatier's works have been lost; several were melted down during the Second World War.

He was the father-in-law of the sculptor Jules Blanchard.

Places

Several towns have named streets after him:

and some smaller communes in the Loire department:

Works

Sources

External links