Jean-Jacques Flatters | |
---|---|
Born |
Johann Jakob Flatters 6 November 1786 Krefeld, Westphalia |
Died | 19 August 1845 Paris, France |
(aged 58)
Nationality | French |
Occupation | Sculptor |
Jean-Jacques Flatters, (6 November 1786 – 19 August 1845) was a French neo-classical sculptor. He was the father of Lieutenant-colonel Paul Flatters, who led a tragic mission in the Sahara in 1881.
Jean Jacques Flatters was born on 6 November 1786 in Krefeld, Westphalia. He came from Westphalia to Paris to study sculpture and painting. He was a pupil of Jean-Antoine Houdon (1741–1828) and Jacques-Louis David (1748–1825). Flatters began exhibiting at the Salon in 1810. On 25 September 1813 he won the second prize for sculpture in the Prix de Rome. Jean-Jacques Flatters served in the French army from February to July 1814 at the close of the First French Empire.
During the Bourbon Restoration Flatters earned a living by making busts of famous people such as Goethe and Byron. He received only three official commissions before 1830: a bust in 1819 and two more busts in 1829. A letter of 9 November 1830 has survived that Flatters wrote to the Count of Montalivet, Minister of the Interior. In it he states that the Minister Perronnet [sic] had promised him the job of created a marble statue of Saint Louis, while the sculptor James Pradier would make one of Charlemagne, but now both jobs had been given to Pradier. Flatters described the many difficulties he had experienced in his career and appealed to the minister to give him justice. On 4 September 1831 Flatters was given compensation of 5,000 francs for loss of the commission.
In 1830 Flatters married Emile-Dircée Lebon, daughter of the Napoleonic colonel Simon Lebon. Their son was Paul Flatters (1832–81), the future explorer. Jean Jacques Flatters died on 19 August 1845 in Paris, aged 58. A patron and friend of the family, Baron Isidore Taylor, paid for his son's education in the Lycée de Laval in Laval, Mayenne.