Joseph Maria Christen
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Joseph Anton Maria Christen (22 February 1767 – 30 March 1838) was a Swiss sculptor.
Life
[edit]Christen was born in Buochs, canton of Nidwalden, Switzerland. In 1785 he became a pupil of the portrait painter Johann Melchior Wyrsch in Lucerne, but soon turned to sculpture. From 1788 to 1791 he worked in Rome under the supervision of Alexander Trippel and then settled in Basel.
His works include a statue of Nicholas of Flüe, the group Angelica and Medor (1791), busts of Salomon Gessner, Johann Jakob Bodmer, Hans von Hallwyl, Johann Heinrich Pestalozzi, Gottlieb Konrad Pfeffel, the Countess of Montgelas (pictured) and a herm of the Emperor Napoleon.
In later life he was an inmate of Thorberg Castle, at that time a lunatic asylum, where he died.
His son was Raphael Christen, also a sculptor.
Sources
[edit]- Dieter Ulrich: Christen, Joseph Maria in German, French and Italian in the online Historical Dictionary of Switzerland.
- "Christen, Joseph Anton Maria". SIKART Lexicon on art in Switzerland., 1998
- von Matt, Hans, 1957: Der Bildhauer Joseph Maria Christen, 1767 – 1838. Lucerne: Diepold Schilling Verlag
External links
[edit]This article may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. The specific problem is: Copy-pasted and translated from public domain German encyclopedia. (March 2013) |