Antoine Laurent Dantan

Antoine Laurent Dantan (8 December 1798 in Saint-Cloud – 25 May 1878 in Saint-Cloud) was a French academic sculptor, known as 'Dantan the Elder' to distinguish him from his slightly younger brother, Jean-Pierre Dantan (1800–1869), who was also a sculptor. He won the Prix de Rome for sculpture in 1828.

Bust of Alexandre-Antoine Hureau de Sénarmont by Antoine Laurent Dantan, Galerie des Batailles, Palace of Versailles

The Dantan brothers are sometimes confused in the literature. Indeed, they both entered the studio of François-Joseph Bosio, at the École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts in Paris, at the same time in 1823. He was the subject of an article in the French newspaper L'Illustration in 1850.[1] He had a son, Édouard Joseph Dantan (1848–1897), who became a well-known painter in his lifetime.

References edit

  1. ^ Augustin Joseph Du Pays, 'Visites aux ateliers [Premier article]: Atelier de M. Dantan Ainé', L'Illustration, 11 May 1850, pp. 293–94.