-
buildings are
decorated by
friezes depicting dancers sculpted by Jean
Guillaume Moitte. The
tollhouses were
designed for
collecting the octroi, or
taxes on goods...
- Jean-Guillaume
Moitte (11
November 1746,
Paris – 2 May 1810, Paris) was a
French sculptor.
Moitte was the son of Pierre-Etienne
Moitte. He
became the...
- masters. His son
Alexandre Moitte (1750-1828) also
became a painter.
Moitte died in Paris.
Moitte in the RKD
Pierre Moitte in the Web
Gallery of Art v...
-
Jacques de; Buvée; Lottré; Tardieu,
Pierre François; Baquoy, Jean-Charles;
Moitte, Pierre-Étienne; Leclerc, Georges-Louis (1755). "Le
Grande Danois". Illustrations...
- Numa
Pompilius at the Louvre, by Jean
Guillaume Moitte...
-
during the Revolution. The
sculpture on the
pediment by Jean
Guillaume Moitte,
called The
Fatherland crowning the
heroic and
civic virtues was replaced...
- was
later destro****. A
monumental tomb with
sculptures by Jean-Guillaume
Moitte serves as his
final resting place at the
Great St
Bernard Ho****e (his body...
- the
Pontoise Cathedral.
There is also a
statue of him by Jean
Guillaume Moitte in the
Pantheon de Paris, and
another statue of
Leclerc fully nude at the...
- the
neoclassical style. In
cooperation with the
sculptor Jean
Guillaume Moitte, who
provided him with
designs and models, he
became one of the leading...
- 1766 –
Nicolas Sénéchal 1767 – Louis-Jacques
Pilon 1768 – Jean
Guillaume Moitte 1769 – Jean
Joseph Foucou 1770 – René
Millot 1771 –
Joseph Deschamps 1772...