Sculptor

1. Baccio Bandinelli (1493)

Sculptor

Renaissance Italian sculptor, draughtsman and painter. He created the famous statue Hercules and Cacus.

2. Benvenuto Cellini (1500)

Sculptor

Italian goldsmith and sculptor who was one of the most important artists of Mannerism. He sculpted Perseus with the Head of Medusa.

3. Pierre Puget (1970)

Sculptor

French painter, sculptor, architect and engineer who sculpted statues and busts, such as Perseus and Andromeda, located at The Louvre.

4. Andreas Schluter (1664)

Sculptor

German baroque sculptor and architect associated with the Petrine Baroque style. He created the Golden ceremonial sarcophagus of Queen Sophie Charlotte.

5. Aleijadinho (1738)

Sculptor

Colonial Brazil-born sculptor and architect whose works are seen in various churches of Brazil. He made Peter in Gethsemane, located in Congonhas.

6. Joseph Chinard (1756)

Sculptor

French sculptor who sculpted with a Neoclassical style combined with naturalism and sentiment. He sculpted the terra cotta piece A Lady.

7. William Rush (1756)

Sculptor

Remembered as one of the premiere sculptors of early America, he created an 1812 neoclassical sculpture titled Fourth of July in Center Square, as well as the famous Comedy and...

8. Isaac Witkin (1936)

Sculptor

South African sculptor who pioneered the so-called New Generation of sculptors. He made abstract works of colored fiberglass and wood.

9. Francis Legatt Chantrey (1970)

Sculptor

English sculptor who became the leading portrait sculptor in Regency Britain by sculpting busts of many notable figures.

10. David d'Angers (1788)

Sculptor

French sculptor and medallist known for his pediment of the Pantheon and his marble Wounded Philopoemen in the Louvre.

11. Abbondio Sangiorgio (1970)

Sculptor

Italian sculptor who made portrait sculptures and large public sculptures in places such as Turin and Milan.

12. Antonin Moine (1970)

Sculptor

French romantic sculptor of the first half of the 19th century. He made sculptures commissioned for the Fontaine des Mers.

13. Hiram Powers (1805)

Sculptor

American neoclassical sculptor who made large marble busts, such as The Fisher Boy, Il Penseroso, and The Last of the Tribe.

14. William F. Woodington (1970)

Sculptor

English painter and sculptor known best for the Coade Stone Lions and a bronze plaque in Trafalgar Square.

15. George Frederic Watts (1817)

Sculptor

English Victorian painter and sculptor usually associated with the Symbolist movement. He created Physical Energy, located in Cape Town, South Africa.

16. John Henry Foley (1818)

Sculptor

Irish sculptor who made the statue of Daniel O'Connell in Dublin, as well as the statue of Prince Albert in London.

17. Miklos Izso (1831)

Sculptor

Hungarian sculptor whose sculptural style combined elements of classicism and academic style. He sculpted "Shepherd Playing the Flute."

18. Paul Dubois (1829)

Sculptor

French sculptor and painter who created bronze statues, such as Dubois' Military Courage statue, located in Mount Vernon, Baltimore.

19. Cyprian Godebski (1835)

Sculptor

Polish sculptor and professor at the Imperial Academy of Arts in St. Petersburg. He created the Nicolaus Copernicus Monument in Kraków.

20. Mark Antokolski (1840)

Sculptor

Russian-Jewish sculptor known for the psychological complexity of his historical images. He sculpted Mephistopheles, finished in 1884.

21. Edmonia Lewis (1844)

Sculptor

New York-born artist whose career as a sculptor took her to Rome, Italy. Her famous sculptures include The Death of Cleopatra (more than 3,000 pounds and made of marble) and...

22. Edouard Lanteri (1970)

Sculptor

British sculptor and medallist whose style of sculpting was influential to New Sculpture. He also wrote a series of books on sculpture.

23. Per Hasselberg (1850)

Sculptor

Swedish sculptor who was also known as Petter Hasselberg or Petter Åkesson. He sculpted Snöklockan, located in Stockholm.

24. Laurent Marqueste (1970)

Sculptor

French sculptor of the neo-Baroque Beaux-Arts tradition. He sculpted Nessus, located in the Tuileries Gardens in Paris.

25. Daniel Chester French (1850)

Sculptor

Sculptor who created the Lincoln Memorial statue of Lincoln in a chair, he was one of the most prolific American sculptors of the 19th century.

26. John S. Conway (1852)

Sculptor

American artist and sculptor who made the Milwaukee Soldiers Monument, which was made in Rome and then shipped to Milwaukee.

27. Hamo Thornycroft (1850)

Sculptor

British sculptor who created several London landmarks, such as the statue of Oliver Cromwell by the Palace of Westminster.

28. Edward Onslow Ford (1852)

Sculptor

English sculptor known for the refinement of his busts. He sculpted The Egyptian Singer and its companion piece Applause.

29. Gyula Donath (1850)

Sculptor

Hungarian sculptor who worked in classicism and Art Nouveau styles. He created the public monuments the Millennium of Hungary and the Imperial Jubilee.

30. Frederick William MacMonnies (1970)

Sculptor

American sculptor of the Beaux-Arts school who was also a highly accomplished painter and portraitist. He designed the Princeton Battle Monument.

31. Leonardo Bistolfi (1970)

Sculptor

Italian sculptor who was an important exponent of Italian Symbolism. He sculpted Ai caduti at Casale Monferrato, finished in 1925.

32. Paolo Troubetzkoy (1866)

Sculptor

Russian artist and sculptor who G.B. Shaw described as 'the most astonishing sculptor of modern times'. He sculpted a monument to Alexander III of Russia.

33. Georges Lacombe (1868)

Sculptor

French sculptor and painter known as Le Nabi sculpteur, or the sculptor of the group. He made the carved wood piece L'Existence.

34. Ernst Barlach (1970)

Sculptor

German expressionist sculptor, printmaker and writer. Many of his works were confiscated by the Nazi Party for being considered degenerate art.

35. Adolph Alexander Weinman (1970)

Sculptor

American sculptor and architectural sculptor remembered as the designer of the Walking Liberty Half Dollar.

36. Janos Horvay (1970)

Sculptor

Hungarian sculptor who earned his reputation with his statues depicting Lajos Kossuth, the leader of the Hungarian Uprising.

37. James Earle Fraser (1876)

Sculptor

American sculptor who was one of the most prominent of the first half of the 20th century. He made iconic work that was essential to many Washington, DC structures.

38. Eugene Lanceray (1970)

Sculptor

Russian graphic artist, painter, and sculptor associated with Mir iskusstva, or the World of Art.

39. Charles Keck (1970)

Sculptor

American sculptor known for his monuments and architectural sculpture. He made the statue of James B. Duke at Duke University.

40. Georg Kolbe (1970)

Sculptor

German figure sculptor known for his vigorous, modern, simplified classical style. He sculpted a monument for Heinrich Heine.

41. Jacob Epstein (1880)

Sculptor

American-born British sculptor who was a pioneer of modern sculpture. He sculpted a statue of Jan Smuts in Parliament Square, London,

42. Clara Westhoff (1878)

Sculptor

German sculptor and the wife of poet Rainer Maria Rilke. She studied with Carl Seffner and Max Klinger.

43. Ivo Kerdic (1970)

Sculptor

Sculptor known for his metalwork, including statues, medals, and medallions.

44. Rebecca Rose (1980)

Sculptor

Award winning sculptor and jewelry designer who is know for her "Sculpturings", which is her term for sculptured jewelry.

45. Henri Laurens (1970)

Sculptor

French sculptor and illustrator who sculpted in the Cubist style. He sculpted L'Amphion, located in Caracas, Venezuela.

46. Mario Sarto (1885)

Sculptor

Italian sculptor of religious and commemorative art. He made the Ancient Christian Cross, a bronze medallion.

47. Malvina Hoffman (1885)

Sculptor

American sculptor and author who made life-size bronze sculptures of people, such as Martinique Woman, located in the Brooklyn Museum.

48. Alexander Archipenko (1970)

Sculptor

Avant garde sculptor and painter who was also associated with the cubist movement for his use of geometric shapes.

49. Ivan Shadr (1887)

Sculptor

Russian/Soviet sculptor and medalist who sculpted Stone as a weapon of the proletariat and Woman with an Oar.

50. Asmundur Sveinsson  (1893)

Sculptor

Icelandic sculptor from Kolsstadir in West Iceland.

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