, a French sculptor, was the son of a sculptor and architect, and
, a French sculptor, was
the son of a sculptor and architect, and born at Chaumont
in Bassigni in 1698. He was drawn by an irresistible passion for these two arts, but confined himself at length to
the former. After having passed some time at Paris under
the younger Coustou, and obtained the prize at the academy in 1722, he was carried to Rome at the king’s expence. Upon his return from Italy, where his talents had
been greatly improved, he adorned Paris with his works:
a list of them may be seen in a life of him, published in
1762, 12mo, by the count de Caylus, but some of them no
longer exist, particularly his fine equestrian statue of Louis
XV. formerly in the square named after that monarch. In
1744 he obtained a place in the academy; and, two years
after, a professorship. He died July 17, 1762, a loss
to the arts, and much lamented; for he is described as a
man of great talent, disinterested spirit, and of most amiable manners. Music was his object in the hours of recreation, and his talents in this way were very considerable.
Count Caylus, in his “Tableaux tires de l‘Iliade et de
l’Odysse d'Homere,
” mentions Bouchardon, with honour,
among the tew artists who borrowed their subjects from Homer, and relates the following anecdote: “This great artist having lately read Homer in an old and detestable
French translation, came one day to me, his eyes sparkling
with fire, and said, * Since I have read this book, men
seem to be fifteen feet high, and all nature is enlarged in
my sight'.
” This anecdote, however, does not give a very
high idea of the education of a French artist, and a professor of the art.