Jean-Pierre-Antoine Tassaert

Jean-Pierre-Antoine Tassaert (Antwerp[1] 1727 – Berlin 21 January 1788) was a minor sculptor of Flemish extraction, who worked in the manner of Falconnet. He went to Paris as a young man to work in the atelier of Michel-Ange Slodtz, a member of a dynasty of designer-sculptors working for the royal account. After Slodtz's death in 1764, he emerged as a sculptor in his own right. In 1774, after a successful decade in Paris, he was called to Berlin, where he was appointed court sculptor to Frederick the Great and executed decorative sculptures for Potsdam. He directed the courses in sculpture at the Academy, where his major pupil and successor was Johann Gottfried Schadow.

He was the nephew of Jean-Pierre Tassaert (1651-1725), and the grandson of Pierre Tassaert (master of the painters' guild 1635- ca 1692/93) both painters of Antwerp.

Selected works

Notes

  1. ^ He was baptised 19 August 1727.
  2. ^ Michael Levey, Painting and Sculpture in France, 1700-1789 (1993:151)
  3. ^ The other sculptors were Clodion, whose Music and Poetry are at the National Gallery of Art, Washington DC, Jean-Jacques Caffiéri, whose Geometry and Architecture, signed and dated 1776, are at Waddesdon Manor, and Félix Lecomte; of the four Michel Levey found Tassaert the least interesting.