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Home - Collection - Curatorial Departments - Sculptures - Selected Works - France, 17th and 18th Centuries

Sculptures : France, 17th and 18th Centuries

Jean-Antoine HOUDON (1741-1828)
Voltaire (François-Marie Arouet, known as; 1694-1778), writer
1778
© Musée du Louvre/P. Philibert
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Jean-Antoine HOUDON (1741-1828)
Voltaire (François-Marie Arouet, known as; 1694-1778), writer
Two busts of Voltaire, with wig and bare-headed
1778
The sculptor's studio; bought in 1848 on the request of the Minister of the Interior for the Académie Française; it stayed in the Ministry of the Interior where it was noticed by Georges Clemenceau who offered it to the Louvre.
Bust of Voltaire wearing a wig: marble, on a white marble pedestal
Bust of Voltaire, bare-headed: marble, on a veined red marble pedestal
Bust of Voltaire wearing a wig: H. 48 cm; W. 44.3 cm; D. 35 cm.
Bust of Voltaire, bare-headed: marble, H. 35 cm; W. 19.5 cm; D. 20 cm.
Bust of Voltaire wearing a wig: marble: entered the Louvre in 1906
Bust of Voltaire, bare-headed: gift from Countess Marie-Louise Biver, 1981
R.F. 1426
Sculptures
Author(s)
Montalbetti Valérie
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Voltaire (François-Marie Arouet, known as; 1694-1778), writer

"One of the finest attributes of the very difficult art of statuary is to preserve shapes accurately and render nearly imperishable the image of the men who have brought their country glory or happiness." Houdon's definition applies perfectly to his portrait of Voltaire, who was a veritable icon of the Enlightenment. He reproduced it many times, but Voltaire never lost his sardonic smile or the twinkle in his eye.
Description

Voltaire and Houdon


Voltaire symbolizes the spirit of the Enlightenment par excellence. These days he is known as a philosopher and a champion of tolerance, but he was also a famous playwright, poet, and historian. After twenty years in exile in Ferney (Switzerland), he returned to Paris in February 1778, at the age of eighty-three and in poor health, and was given a triumphal welcome. When he attended a performance of his play Irene at the Comédie-Française, his statue was crowned with laurels and the patriarch was given a standing ovation. Houdon, who had not met him before, managed several sittings before Voltaire died on 30 May 1778. Of the many busts made of Voltaire, only the bare-headed one by Houdon wholly pleased the great man. Houdon also molded Voltaire's funerary mask.
He used all this material to produce several types of bust, two of which are represented in the Louvre, and reproduced them in various media (marble, bronze, terracotta, plaster).

Voltaire in a Wig


This bust shows the philosopher in contemporary clothing and wearing a wig, which is incidentally rather outmoded. It portrays a man rooted in his times, prepared to fight for his ideas, such as the rehabilitation of the unjustly condemned Protestant Calas. Houdon tried to capture Voltaire's physical appearance and psychological presence, but did not seek to idealize him. He made no attempt to mask the signs of age: the rings under his eyes, the wrinkles and deep folds on his cheeks, the impression of withered skin . . . But the portrait radiates with intelligence and mischief: the eyes twinkling under the bulging brow and the compressed lips suggest ironic wit. The Louvre's marble bust comes from the sale after the sculptor's death in 1828. In another version, Voltaire's jacket is swathed in draperies (Comédie-Française).

Voltaire Bare-headed


Another type of bust uses the iconography initiated for Diderot. Bare-headed, with neither jacket nor drapery, with the torso cut off, he is shown in the manner of the ancient philosophers, giving an impression of timelessness. The old man's fragility is more apparent. The wrinkles on his face are deeper. There are no clothes to hide the stringy tendons in his neck. His bald head suggests a skull. But his eyes and lips have lost none of their vivacity: behind the domed forehead, the philosopher's mind is just as sharp. The bust in the Louvre, a gift from Countess Biver, is of outstanding quality which proves it was executed by Houdon himself. The marble has been worked with great delicacy, particularly noticeable in the rendering of a few wisps of hair on his temples. The Louvre also has a lost-wax bronze cast of the same type of bust.
A third type of bust, with the philosopher's scarf wrapped around his head, is derived from the seated statue of Voltaire sculpted for the Comédie Française (in situ). On the pedestal there are two low-relief masks symbolizing tragedy and comedy.
Although Voltaire was represented by the greatest artists, painters or sculptors, Houdon's portrait dominates as the quintessential image not only of the writer but of the philosophic spirit of the 18th century.

Documentation
Réau Louis, Houdon, sa vie et son oeuvre, Paris, 1964, I, p. 355-360.
Arnason H. H., The Sculptures of Houdon, Londres, 1975, p. 49-53.
Benoît Jérémie, "Voltaire de Jean-Antoine Houdon", in Nouvelles acquisitions du département des sculptures (1980-1983), musée du Louvre, Éditions de la Réunion des musées nationaux, 1984, p. 68-69.
Jean-Antoine Houdon, Sculpteur des Lumières, Washington, Los Angeles, Versailles, Éditions de la Réunion des musées nationaux, 2004, p. 152-172.
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Reception Pieces – Admission to the Royal Academy
Sculptors seeking admission to the French Royal Academy submitted works in plaster or clay for initial acceptance by a jury, and were then asked to execute a set piece (or "reception piece") in marble, within a specified time limit. Most of these reception pieces of are preserved in the Louvre.

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