Josse de Corte: Difference between revisions
migrating Persondata to Wikidata, please help, see challenges for this article |
m disambiguate links (Flemish) following a requested move |
||
(15 intermediate revisions by 12 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[image:Le Court Altare S. Maria della Salute.jpg|thumb|250px|''Queen of Heaven expelling the Plague'', Main altar, [[Santa Maria della Salute|Salute]]]] |
[[image:Le Court Altare S. Maria della Salute.jpg|thumb|250px|''Queen of Heaven expelling the Plague'', Main altar, [[Santa Maria della Salute|Salute]]]] |
||
[[File:Beato Gherardo Sagredo in San Francesco dela Vigna a Venezia.jpg|left|thumb|150px|Gerardo Sagredo by Josse de Corte]] |
[[File:Beato Gherardo Sagredo in San Francesco dela Vigna a Venezia.jpg|left|thumb|150px|Gerardo Sagredo by Josse de Corte]] |
||
'''Josse de Corte''' (1627–1679) was a [[Baroque]] [[Flemish]] sculptor, born in [[Ypres]], but mainly active in [[Venice]] after 1657. |
'''Josse de Corte''' (1627–1679) was a [[Baroque]] [[Flemish people|Flemish]] sculptor, born in [[Ypres]], but mainly active in [[Venice]] after 1657. |
||
==History== |
==History== |
||
He is also known as ''Giusto Le Court'' ''Giusto Cort'' or ''Josse Lecurt'' or ''Josse Cort''. He obtained some training in Rome by [[François Duquesnoy]]. |
He is also known as ''Giusto Le Court'' ''Giusto Cort'' or ''Josse Lecurt'' or ''Josse Cort''. He obtained some training in Rome by [[François Duquesnoy]]. |
||
His masterpiece is the theatrical and dynamic high altar sculptural complex depicting the ''Queen of Heaven expelling the Plague'' for the church of [[Santa Maria della Salute]] in Venice. It depicts the Virgin Mary saving pleading figures and scattering the personified evil of the plague. |
His masterpiece is the theatrical and dynamic high altar sculptural complex depicting the ''Queen of Heaven expelling the Plague'' for the church of [[Santa Maria della Salute]] in Venice. It depicts the Virgin Mary saving pleading figures and scattering the personified evil of the plague. |
||
He also completed part of the ''[[Morosini]] Monument'' in [[San Clemente all'Isola]] in Venice. He also sculpted the Atlantes on the façade of the church of the [[Ospedaletto, Venice|Ospedaletto]] in Venice. Among his pupils in Venice were [[Heinrich Meyring]] (Enrico Merengo), [[Francesco Cavrioli]], [[Francesco Penso]], and [[Orazio Marinali]]. Together they all contributed, together with Tommaso Rues influenced by Le Court to the extensive sculptural decoration of the exterior of the church of the Salute. |
He also completed part of the ''[[Morosini family|Morosini]] Monument'' in [[San Clemente all'Isola]] in Venice. He also sculpted the Atlantes on the façade of the church of the [[Ospedaletto, Venice|Ospedaletto]] in Venice. Among his pupils in Venice were [[Heinrich Meyring]] (Enrico Merengo), [[Francesco Cavrioli]], [[Francesco Penso]], and [[Orazio Marinali]]. Together they all contributed, together with Tommaso Rues influenced by Le Court to the extensive sculptural decoration of the exterior of the church of the Salute. |
||
{| align=center |
{| align=center |
||
! colspan="4" style="background:#ECECEC; "|'''Atlantes in the ''[[Chiesa dell'Ospedaletto]]'' ''' |
! colspan="4" style="background:#ECECEC; "|'''Atlantes in the ''[[Chiesa dell'Ospedaletto]]'' ''' |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|[[image:Atlas4 Giusto Le Court Chiesa dell'Ospedaletto.jpg| |
|[[image:Atlas4 Giusto Le Court Chiesa dell'Ospedaletto.jpg|125px]] |
||
|[[image:Atlas2 Giusto Le Court Chiesa dell'Ospedaletto.jpg| |
|[[image:Atlas2 Giusto Le Court Chiesa dell'Ospedaletto.jpg|130px]] |
||
|[[image:Atlas3 Giusto Le Court Chiesa dell'Ospedaletto.jpg| |
|[[image:Atlas3 Giusto Le Court Chiesa dell'Ospedaletto.jpg|130px]] |
||
|[[image:Atlas1 Giusto Le Court Chiesa dell'Ospedaletto.jpg|120px]] |
|[[image:Atlas1 Giusto Le Court Chiesa dell'Ospedaletto.jpg|120px]] |
||
|} |
|} |
||
</center></div></center> |
|||
==References== |
==References== |
||
*{{cite book | first= Rudolph|last= |
*{{cite book | first= Rudolph|last= Wittkower|author-link= Rudolf Wittkower| year=1993| title= Pelican History of Art| chapter= Art and Architecture Italy, 1600-1750| others=1980 | pages= 450–452 | publisher= Penguin Books Ltd}} |
||
{{Commons category|Giusto Le Court}} |
{{Commons category|Giusto Le Court}} |
||
{{Authority control}} |
{{Authority control (arts)}} |
||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Corte, Josse de}} |
{{DEFAULTSORT:Corte, Josse de}} |
||
[[Category:1627 births]] |
[[Category:1627 births]] |
||
[[Category:1679 deaths]] |
[[Category:1679 deaths]] |
||
⚫ | |||
[[Category:Flemish artists (before 1830)]] |
|||
[[Category:Flemish Baroque sculptors]] |
[[Category:Flemish Baroque sculptors]] |
||
[[Category:Italian sculptors]] |
[[Category:Italian sculptors]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Italian male sculptors]] |
||
[[Category: |
[[Category:Artists from Ypres]] |
||
⚫ | |||
[[Category:17th-century Venetian people]] |
|||
{{Italy-sculptor-stub}} |
{{Italy-sculptor-stub}} |
Latest revision as of 02:18, 20 June 2023
Josse de Corte (1627–1679) was a Baroque Flemish sculptor, born in Ypres, but mainly active in Venice after 1657.
History
[edit]He is also known as Giusto Le Court Giusto Cort or Josse Lecurt or Josse Cort. He obtained some training in Rome by François Duquesnoy.
His masterpiece is the theatrical and dynamic high altar sculptural complex depicting the Queen of Heaven expelling the Plague for the church of Santa Maria della Salute in Venice. It depicts the Virgin Mary saving pleading figures and scattering the personified evil of the plague.
He also completed part of the Morosini Monument in San Clemente all'Isola in Venice. He also sculpted the Atlantes on the façade of the church of the Ospedaletto in Venice. Among his pupils in Venice were Heinrich Meyring (Enrico Merengo), Francesco Cavrioli, Francesco Penso, and Orazio Marinali. Together they all contributed, together with Tommaso Rues influenced by Le Court to the extensive sculptural decoration of the exterior of the church of the Salute.
Atlantes in the Chiesa dell'Ospedaletto | |||
---|---|---|---|
References
[edit]- Wittkower, Rudolph (1993). "Art and Architecture Italy, 1600-1750". Pelican History of Art. 1980. Penguin Books Ltd. pp. 450–452.