Jean-Baptiste Stouf
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Jean-Baptiste Stouf (Paris 1742–Charenton-le-Pont 1826) was a French sculptor known especially for his commemorative portrait busts and expressive emotional content.
Biography[]
Stouf was a pupil of Guillaume II Coustou, son of the great French baroque sculptor Guillaume Coustou. Stouf's Bust of Belisarius at the J. Paul Getty Museum shows the general of Justinian, blinded, as a beggar, in a manner that suggests a philosopher or saint. His reception piece for the Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture in 1785, the Death of Abel, shows Cain's victim sprawled full-length on the ground (Louvre Museum). The Detroit Museum of Art has a terracotta sketch for a Hercules Vanquishing Two Centaurs.
External links[]
- Louvre Museum Official Website: Jean-Baptiste Stouf: 6 sculptures
- Jean-Baptiste Stouf in American public collections, on the French Sculpture Census website
Categories:
- 18th-century French sculptors
- French male sculptors
- 19th-century French sculptors
- Members of the Académie des beaux-arts
- 1742 births
- 1826 deaths