François Dieussart (also Frans; Armentières, c. 1600 – London, 1661) was a Walloon sculptor who worked for court patrons in England, the Dutch Republic and northern Europe, producing portrait busts in the Italianate manner.[1]
Life and work
Dieussart was likely an active sculptor by the time he arrived in Rome in his early twenties. He appears in an entry from 1622 at the charitable organisation run at the Church of St. Julian of the Flemings and had become its director by 1630. He was invited to England by the Earl of Arundel in 1636, and made a reputation there with the construction of a magnificent mechanical monstrance forty feet (12.2 metres) high for Queen Henrietta Maria's chapel at Somerset House.[2]
Frits Scholten, François Dieussart, Constantijn Huygens, and the Classical Ideal in Funerary Sculpture, Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art, Vol. 25, No. 4. (1997), pp. 303–328.
^Charles Avery, "François Dieussart (c. 1600–1661 portrait sculptor to the courts of northern Europe", Victoria and Albert Museum Yearbook4 1974:63-99 brings together Dieussart's work.
^Avery 1974:65 and Edward Chaney, 'Thomas Howard, 14th Earl of Arundel by Francois Dieussart', Apollo, cxliv, no 413 (August 1996), pp. 49-50.
^Michael Vickers, "Rupert of the Rhine: a new portrait by Dieussart and Bernini's Charles I" Apollo107 (1978:161-69).
^Gudrun Raatschen, Plaster Casts of Bernini's Bust of Charles I, The Burlington Magazine, Vol. 138, No. 1125. (December 1996), pp. 813-816; 813
^Joachim von Sandrart (1675), "Franciscus du Sart", L'Academia Todesca. della Architectura, Scultura & Pittura: Oder Teutsche Academie der Edlen Bau- Bild- und Mahlerey-Künste (in German), vol. 3, Nuremberg, p. 350, retrieved 29 June 2019