
Baroque sculpture is thesculpture associated with theBaroque style of the period between the early 17th and mid 18th centuries. In Baroque sculpture, groups of figures assumed new importance, and there was a dynamic movement and energy of human forms—they spiralled around an empty central vortex, or reached outwards into the surrounding space. Baroque sculpture often had multiple ideal viewing angles, and reflected a general continuation of theRenaissance move away from the relief to sculpture created in the round, and designed to be placed in the middle of a large space—elaborate fountains such asGian Lorenzo Bernini‘sFontana dei Quattro Fiumi (Rome, 1651), or those in theGardens of Versailles were a Baroque speciality. TheBaroque style was perfectly suited to sculpture, with Bernini the dominating figure of the age in works such asEcstasy of Saint Theresa (1647–1652).[1] Much Baroque sculpture added extra-sculptural elements, for example, concealed lighting, or water fountains, or fused sculpture and architecture to create a transformative experience for the viewer. Artists saw themselves as in the classical tradition, but admiredHellenistic and later Roman sculpture, rather than that of the more "Classical" periods as they are seen today.[2]
Baroque sculpture followed Renaissance andMannerist sculpture and was succeeded byRococo andNeoclassical Sculpture.Rome was the earliest centre where the style was formed. The style spread to the rest of Europe, and especiallyFrance gave a new direction in the late 17th century. Eventually it spread beyond Europe to the colonial possessions of the European powers, especially in Latin America and the Philippines.
TheProtestant Reformation had brought an almost total stop to religious sculpture in much of Northern Europe, and though secular sculpture, especially for portrait busts andtomb monuments, continued, theDutch Golden Age has no significant sculptural component outside goldsmithing.[3] Partly in direct reaction, sculpture was as prominent inCatholicism as in the late Middle Ages. The CatholicSouthern Netherlands saw a flourishing of Baroque sculpture starting from the second half of the 17th century with many local workshops producing a wide range of Baroque sculpture including church furniture, funeral monuments and small-scale sculptures executed in ivory and durable woods such as boxwood. Flemish sculptors would play a prominent role in spreading the Baroque idiom abroad including in the Dutch Republic, Italy, England, Sweden and France.[4]
In the 18th century much sculpture continued on Baroque lines—theTrevi Fountain was only completed in 1762. TheRococo style was better suited to smaller works.[5]

The Baroque style emerged from Renaissance sculpture, which, drawing upon classical Greek and Roman sculpture, had idealized the human form. This was modified byMannerism, when artists strived to give their works a unique and personal style. Mannerism introduced the idea of sculptures featuring strong contrasts; youth and age, beauty and ugliness, men and women. Mannerism also introduced thefigura serpentina, which became a major characteristic of Baroque sculpture. This was the arrangement of figures or groups of figures in an ascending spiral, which gave lightness and movement to the work.[6]
Michelangelo had introducedfigure serpentine inThe Dying Slave (1513–1516) andGenius Victorious (1520–1525), but these works were meant to be seen from a single point of view. An example of work that can be seen from several points of view[vague] is the late 16th century sculpture ofGiambologna,The Rape of the Sabine Women (1581–1583), which changes depending upon the viewpoint. This became a very common feature in Baroque sculpture. The work of Giambologna had a strong influence on the masters of the Baroque era, particularlyBernini.[6]
Another important influence leading to the Baroque style was the Catholic Church, which was seeking artistic weapons in the battle against the rise of Protestantism. TheCouncil of Trent (1545–1563) gave the Pope greater powers to guide artistic creation, and expressed a strong disapproval of the doctrines ofhumanism, which had been central to the arts during the Renaissance.[7] During the pontificate ofPaul V (1605–1621) the church began to develop artistic doctrines to counter the Reformation, and commissioned new artists to carry them out.[citation needed]
The dominant figure in Baroque sculpture wasGian Lorenzo Bernini (1598–1680). He was the son of a Florentine sculptor,Pietro Bernini, who had been called to Rome byPope Paul V. The young Bernini made his first solo works at the age of fifteen, and in 1618–25 received a major commission for statues for the villa of Cardinal Scipion Borghese. His works, highly dramatic, designed to be seen from multiple ponts of view, and spiraling upwards, had an immense impact on European sculpture. He continued to dominate Italian sculpture through his works on Roman fountains, the Baldequin of St. Peter and the tomb of Pope Alexander VII within St. Peter's Basilica, and his altar ensemble for the Church of Santa-Maria della Vittoria in Rome. He received his final fountain sculpture commission for the Fountain of the Elephant (1665–1667), followed by a series of angels for the Sant Angelo Bridge in Rome (1667–69).[8]
Bernini died in 1680, but his style influenced sculptors across Europe, particularly in France, Bavaria and Austria.[citation needed]
Generous papal commissions made Rome a magnet for sculptors in Italy and across Europe. They decorated churches, squares, and, a Rome specialty, the popular new fountains created around the city by the Popes.Stefano Maderno (1576–1636), originally fromBissone in Lombardy, preceded the work of Bernini. He began his career making reduced-size copies of classical works in bronze. His major large-scale work was a statue ofSaint Cecilia (1600, for the Church of Saint Cecilia in theTrastevere in Rome. The saint's body lies stretched out, as if it were in a sarcophagus, evoking a sense of pathos.[9]
Another early important Roman sculptor wasFrancesco Mochi (1580–1654), born inMontevarchi, near Florence. He made a celebrated bronze equestrian statue ofAlexander Farnese for the main square ofPiacenza (1620–1625), and a vivid statue ofSaint Veronica for Saint Peter's Basilica, so active that she seems to be about to leap from the niche.[9]
Other notable Italian Baroque sculptors includedAlessandro Algardi (1598–1654), whose first major commission was the tomb ofPope Leo XI in the Vatican. He was considered a rival of Bernini, though his work was similar in style. His other major works included a large sculpted bas-relief of the legendary meeting betweenPope Leo I andAttila the Hun (1646–1653), in which the Pope persuaded Attila not to attack Rome.[10]
The Flemish sculptorFrançois Duquesnoy (1597–1643) was another important figure of the Italian Baroque. He was a friend of the painterPoussin, and was especially known for his statue ofSaint Susanna at Santa Maria de Loreto in Rome, and his statue ofSaint Andrew (1629–1633) at the Vatican. He was named royal sculptor ofLouis XIII, but died in 1643 during the journey from Rome to Paris.[11]
Major sculptors in the late period includedNiccolo Salvi (1697–1751), whose most famous work was the design of theTrevi Fountain (1732–1751). The fountain also contained allegorical works by other prominent Italian Baroque sculptors, includingFilippo della VallePietro Bracci, and Giovanni Grossi. The fountain, in all its grandeur and exuberance, represented the final act of the Italian Baroque style.[12]
The major part of French Baroque sculpture was intended to glorify not the Church, but the French monarchs -Louis XIII,Louis XIV, andLouis XV. Though baroque sculpture already emerged in the 1630s in France with the likes ofJacques Sarazin andPhilippe de Buyster, much of it was produced by the sculptors of the new Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture, founded in 1648 and later closely supervised byJean-Baptiste Colbert the King's Minister of Finance. French sculptors worked closely together with painters, architects, and landscape designers such asAndré Le Notre to create the sculptural effects found in thePalace of Versailles and its gardens, the other royal residences, and the statues for new city squares created in Paris and other French cities. Colbert also established theFrench Academy in Rome so French sculptors and painters could study classical models.[13]
In the early part of the Baroque period, French sculptors, likePierre de Francqueville, were largely influenced by artists from Flanders and the Netherlands, particularly the Mannerism ofGiambologna. But the sculptorsSimon Guillain (1581-1658) and Jacques Sarazin (1592–1660) spent part of their training in Italy when the baroque style was gaining popularity, before returning to France.Bernini himself, at the peak of his fame, came to Paris in 1665 to present his own plan for the Louvre to Louis XIV. The King and his ministers did not like Bernini's work, and the plan was rejected, though Bernini produced a finebust of Louis XIV, which was greatly admired and is now on display at thePalace of Versailles.[14]
The best French sculptors were engaged to make statues for the fountains gardens of thePalace of Versailles and other royal residences. These includedPierre Puget, who was active in Italy before working for Louis XIV,Jacques Sarazin,François Girardon, who created the largeApollo served by nymphs marble group for Versailles gardens in1666,Jean-Baptiste Tuby,Antoine Coysevox, who made several bust portraits and equestrian statues of Louis XIV andNicolas Coustou. In the 18th century,Guillaume Coustou, Nicolas' younger brother, created a particularly celebrated group of horses for the gardens of theChâteau de Marly, known as theMarly Horses.[15]
Some important French sculptors were mainly active in Italy, especially in Rome, likeNicolas Cordier in the early 1600s, and later in the centuryPierre Le Gros the Younger andPierre-Etienne Monnot, who adopted a more berninian style.
In the later years of the Baroque era,Jean-Baptiste Pigalle (1714-1785) andJean Baptiste Lemoyne (1704–1778), Director of the French Academy in Rome, were considered the finestrococo sculptors, alongRobert Le Lorrain,Michel-Ange Slodtz,Lambert Sigisbert Adam,Étienne Maurice Falconet andClodion.Edme Bouchardon's work marked an early transition between the rocaille and a more severe classicism while Lemoyne's pupil,Jean-Antoine Houdon led the transition of French sculpture from the Baroque toneoclassicism.[16]
The Southern Netherlands, which remained under Spanish,Roman Catholic rule, played an important role in spreading Baroque sculpture in Northern Europe. The Roman CatholicContrareformation demanded that artists created paintings and sculptures in church contexts that would speak to the illiterate rather than to the well-informed. The Contrareformation stressed certain points of religious doctrine, as a result of which certain church furniture, such as theconfessional gained an increased importance. These developments caused a sharp increase in the demand for religious sculpture in the Southern Netherlands.[17] A pivotal role was played by the Brussels sculptorFrançois Duquesnoy who worked for most of his career in Rome. His more elaborate Baroque style closer to that of the Classicism of Bernini was spread in the Southern Netherlands through his brotherJerôme Duquesnoy (II) and other Flemish artists who studied in his workshop in Rome such asRombaut Pauwels and possiblyArtus Quellinus the Elder.[18][19]
The most prominent sculptor wasArtus Quellinus the Elder, a member of a family of famous sculptors and painters, and the cousin and master of another prominent Flemish sculptor,Artus Quellinus the Younger. Born in Antwerp, he had spent time in Rome where he became familiar with local Baroque sculpture and that of his compatriot François Duquesnoy. On his return to Antwerp in 1640, he brought with him a new vision of the role of the sculptor. The sculptor was no longer to be an ornamentalist but a creator of a total artwork in which architectural components were replaced by sculptures. The church furniture became an occasion for the creation of large-scale compositions, incorporated into the church interior.[4] From 1650 onwards, Quellinus worked for 15 years on thenew city hall of Amsterdam together with the lead architectJacob van Campen. Now called the Royal Palace on theDam, this construction project, and in particular the marble decorations he and his workshop produced, became an example for other buildings in Amsterdam. The team of sculptors that Artus supervised during his work on the Amsterdam city hall included many sculptors, mainly from Flanders, who would become leading sculptors in their own right such as his cousinArtus Quellinus II,Rombout Verhulst,Bartholomeus Eggers andGabriël Grupello and probably alsoGrinling Gibbons. They would later spread his Baroque idiom in the Dutch Republic, Germany and England.[20][21] Another important Flemish Baroque sculptor wasLucas Faydherbe (1617-1697) who was fromMechelen, the second important centre of Baroque sculpture in the Southern Netherlands. He trained in Antwerp in Rubens's workshop and played a major role in the spread of HighBaroque sculpture in the Southern Netherlands.[22]
While the Southern Netherlands had witnessed a steep decline in the level of the output and reputation of its painting school in the second half of the 17th century, sculpture replaced painting in importance, under the impulse of domestic and international demand and the massive, high-quality output of a number of family workshops in Antwerp. In particular, the workshops of Quellinus, Jan and Robrecht Colyn de Nole,Jan andCornelis van Mildert,Hubrecht andNorbert van den Eynde, Peter I, Peter II andHendrik Frans Verbrugghen,Willem andWillem Ignatius Kerricx,Pieter Scheemaeckers andLodewijk Willemsens produced a wide range of sculpture including church furniture, funeral monuments and small-scale sculpture executed in ivory and durable woods such as boxwood.[17] While Artus Quellinus the Elder represented the high Baroque, a more exuberant phase of the Baroque referred to as late Baroque commenced from the 1660s. During this phase the works became more theatrical, manifested through religious-ecstatic representations and lavish, showy decorations.[4]
After breaking sway from Spain, the predominantlyCalvinistDutch Republic produced one sculptor of international repute,Hendrick de Keyser (1565–1621). He also was the chief architect of Amsterdam, and creator of major churches and monuments. His most famous work of sculpture is the tomb ofWilliam the Silent (1614–1622) in theNieuwe Kerk inDelft. The tomb was sculpted of marble, originally black but now white, with bronze statues representing William the Silent,Glory at his feet, and the four Cardinal Virtues at the corners. Since the church was Calvinist, the female figures of the Cardinal Virtues were completely clothed from head to foot.[23]
Pupils and assistants of the Flemish sculptorArtus Quellinus the Elder who from 1650 onwards worked for fifteen years on the newcity hall in Amsterdam played an important role in the spread of Baroque sculpture in the Dutch Republic. Now called the Royal Palace on theDam, this construction project, and in particular the marble decorations he and his workshop produced, became an example for other buildings in Amsterdam. The many Flemish sculptors who joined Quellinus to work on this project had an important influence on Dutch Baroque sculpture. They includeRombout Verhulst who became the leading sculptor of marble monuments, including funerary monuments, garden figures and portraits in the Dutch Republic.[24]
Other Flemish sculptors who contributed to sprfead of the Baroque style in sculpture in the Dutch Republic wereJan Claudius de Cock,Jan Baptist Xavery,Pieter Xavery,Bartholomeus Eggers andFrancis van Bossuit. Some of them trained local sculptors. For instance the Dutch sculptor Johannes Ebbelaer (c. 1666-1706) likely received training from Rombout Verhulst, Pieter Xavery and Francis van Bossuit.[25] Van Bossuit is believed to have also been the master ofIgnatius van Logteren.[26] Van Logteren and his sonJan van Logteren left an important mark on the entire 18th century Amsterdam facade architecture and decoration. Their work forms the last summit of the late Baroque and the first Rococo style in sculpture in the Dutch Republic.[27]
Early Baroque sculpture in England was influenced by an influx of refugees from theWars of Religion on the continent. One of the first English sculptors to adopt the style wasNicholas Stone (Also known as Nicholas Stone the Elder) (1586–1652). He apprenticed with another English sculptor, Isaak James, and then in 1601 with the noted Dutch sculptorHendrick de Keyser, who had taken sanctuary in England. Stone returned to Holland with de Keyser, married his daughter, and worked in his studio in the Dutch Republic until he came back to England in 1613. Stone adapted the Baroque style of funeral monuments, for which de Keyser was known, particularly in the tomb of Lady Elizabeth Carey (1617–18) and the tomb of Sir William Curle (1617). Like the Dutch sculptors, he also adapted the use of contrasting black and white marble in the funeral monuments, carefully detailed drapery, and made faces and a hands with a remarkable naturalism and realism. At the same time that he worked as a sculptor, he also collaborated as an architect withInigo Jones.[28]
In the second half of the 18th century, the Anglo-Dutch sculptor andwood carverGrinling Gibbons (1648 – 1721), who had likely trained in the Dutch Republic created important Baroque sculptures in England, including in Windsor Castle and Hampton Court Palace, St. Paul's Cathedral and other London churches. Most of his work consists of decorativeBaroque garlands executed in lime (Tilia) wood.[29] England did not have a homegrown sculpture school that could supply the demand for monumental tombs, portrait sculpture and monuments to it luminaries (the so-called English worthies). As a result sculptors from the continent played an important role in the development of Baroque sculpture in England. Various Flemish sculptors were active in England from the second half of the 17th century, includingArtus Quellinus III, Antoon Verhuke,John Nost,Peter van Dievoet andLaurens van der Meulen.[30] These Flemish artists often collaborated with local artists such as Gibbons. An example is the equestrian statue of Charles II for which Quellinus likely carved the relief panels for the marble pedestal, after designs by Gibbons.[31]
In the 18th century, the Baroque style would be continued by a new influx of continental artists, including the Flemish sculptorsPeter Scheemakers,Laurent Delvaux andJohn Michael Rysbrack and the FrenchmanLouis François Roubiliac (1707–1767). Rysbrack was one of the foremost sculptors of monuments, architectural decorations and portraits in the first half of the 18th century. His style combined the Flemish Baroque with Classical influences. He operated an important workshop whose output left an important imprint on the practice of sculpture in England.[32] Roubiliac arrived in London c. 1730, after training under Balthasar Permoser in Dresden and Nicolas Coustou in Paris. He gained a reputation as a portrait sculptor and later also worked on tomb monuments.[33] His most famous works included abust of the composer Handel,[34] made during Handel's lifetime for the patron of theVauxhall Gardens and the tomb of Joseph and Lady Elizabeth Nightengale (1760). Lady Elizabeth had died tragically of a false childbirth provoked by a stroke of lightning in 1731, and the funeral monument captured with great realism the pathos of her death. His sculptures and busts depicted his subjects as they were. They were dressed in ordinary clothing and given natural postures and expressions, without pretentions of heroism.[35] His portrait busts show a great vivacity and were thus different from the broader treatment by Rysbrack.[33]
The Baroque movement flourished especially in the end of the 17th century and the beginning of the 18th century in Germany and the states of theHabsburg Empire governed fromVienna. A large number of churches and statues had been destroyed by the Protestanticonoclasts during theReformation and theWars of Religion, and large numbers of new works were made to replace them. Many of the new works expressed triumphal themes; Hercules slaying a lion, Saint Michael slaying a dragon, and other subjects which represented the triumph of the Catholic church over th Protestants.[36]
A number of sculptors came from the Netherlands to participate in the reconstruction. They includedHubert Gerhard (1550–1622) from Amsterdam, a student ofGiambologna, who was commissioned by the German bankerHans Fugger to make a monumental fountain for his castle atKirchheim. This was the first Italian Baroque style fountain made north of Alps. Gerhard was soon commissioned to make an Italian-Baroque style fountain for the town square inAugsburg, and a statue of St. Michael slaying a dragon for the prince's residence inMunich. The sculptors Hans Krumper (1570–1634), Hans Reichle (1570–1624) and the Dutch-bornAdrien de Vries (1545–1626) made similar monumental bronze fountains and statues, full of action and drama, for church facades and town squares in Bavaria.[36]
One of the most unusual German sculptors in the late Baroque wasFranz Xaver Messerschmidt, who was known both for religious sculpture and for a series of sculpted portraits portraying extreme expressions.[37]
Balthasar Permoser (1651–1732) spent fourteen years in Italy, from 1675 to 1689, before becoming court sculptor inDresden. He worked in Venice, Rome and Florence, and brought the Italian Baroque to Dresden, particularly in the gardens, and the interior decoration of theZwinger Palace. His most famous work was a sculpture ofThe Apotheosis of Prince Eugene of Savoy, the general who had defeated the invasion of the Ottoman Turks. The Prince is portrayed with his foot on a defeated Turk, and with the attributes of Hercules. His sculpted pulpit for the Hofkirche in Dresden is another masterpiece of Baroque sculpture.[38]
The most dramatic theater for Baroque sculpture in Germany was church architecture. Particularly complex retables and high altars. crowded with statues and rising almost the ceilings, were created byHans Riechle,Jorg Zurn,Hans Degler, and other artists. TheMichael Zürn family produced several generations of very productive sculptors, making figures of polychrome or gilded wood and stucco. Other artists producing remarkable retables includedThomas Schwanthaler.[37]
In Vienna, the later years of the 18th century produced some extraordinary works, that marked the transition from Baroque intoRococo. These included theFall of the Angels inSaint Michael's Church in Vienna, by Karl Georg Merville.[citation needed]
The emergence of the Baroque style in Spain, as in Italy, was largely driven by the Catholic Church, which used it during theCounter-Reformation as a powerful weapon against the Protestants. The great majority of works were made for tombs, altars and chapels. At the same time, the 17th century was a period of economic decline and political and cultural isolation; few Spanish artists traveled abroad, and only a handful of northern European sculptors, notably the Flemish artist José de Arce, came to Spain. As a result, the Spanish Baroque developed independently of the rest of Europe, and had its own specific characteristics.[39]
The crowning of the FrenchPhilip V the grandson of Louis XIV, as King of Spain, and the debutBourbon Dynasty at the beginning of the 18th century brought a dramatic change in cultural policy, and to the style. Thereafter, commissions for major works of art were controlled by the King, not the church, and the royal Academy of Arts. as in France, determined the subjects, style, and materials. This period continued until about 1770.[40]
Large numbers of sculptures were commissioned for retables, reliquaries and funereal monuments in churches, as well as statuary for religious processions. New themes appeared, particularly works devoted to the cult of theVirgin Mary. The style, designed to popular, inclined toward realism. The materials most commonly used was wood, which was frequently painted in different colors. Beginning in about 1610, one specifically Spanish element of realism appeared; sculptors gave their statues wigs of real hair, used pieces of crystal for teardrops, teeth of real ivory, and skin colors painted with careful realism.[40]
There were two important schools of Spanish sculpture in the early 16th century, that ofCastile and that ofAndalusia. The emphasis in the Castile school was more on sacrifice and martyrdom, with an abundance vivid suffering. The school of Andalusia generally used greater ornament, and less violence; the infant Christ and the Virgin Mary were more frequent subjects than in Castile.[41] The first center of the Castile style wasValladolid, where KingPhilip III of Spain resided from 1601 to 1606. The most important artist of the early Castilian school wasGregorio Fernández (1576–1636). His early work showed extraordinary realism and naturalism, showing all the wounds. HisDescent from the Cross in Valladolid, highly detailed and realistic, was made to be carried in processions.[40] His success enabled him to create a large workshop with many assistants, and to make very large-scale works, most notably the retable of the Cathedral ofPlasencia made between 1625 and 1632, considered one of the high points of Spanish art in the first half of the 17th century.[42]
The other early center of Spanish baroque sculpture was the city ofSeville, which had been greatly enriched by the wealth of the Spanish colonies in the New World. The most important sculptor of the early Seville school wasJuan Martínez Montañés (1568–1649), whose works portrayed balance and harmony, with a minimum of violence and blood.[42] Another important Seville sculptor wasPedro Roldán (1624–1699), whose major work was the lavish retable depicting the descent from the Cross of Christ, made for the Hospital de Caidad in Seville (1670–72). The daughter of Roldán,Luisa Roldán (1654–1704), also achieved fame for her work, and became the first woman appointed a royal sculptor in Spain.[43]
Other notable Spanish Baroque sculptors includeAlonso Cano ofGranada (1601–1634), who was also active as a painter and sculptor, and whose works featured an idealized naturalism. His pupil,Pedro de Mena (1628–1688), became one of the most important sculptors of the Seville school, with his delicate and realistic life-size statues of Saints.[44]
The early 18th century saw the creation of several lavishly Baroque works, including the altarEl Transparente byNarciso Tomé inToledo, an enormous altar created so that, as light changes, it seems to be moving. It was one of the rare works in Spain to be made of bronze and marble, rather than wood. It was the centerpiece of an enormous complex of art composed of sculpture, painting and architecture which occupies the center of the cathedral.[45]
With the arrival of the Bourbon Dynasty in power, the center of the art world shifted to Madrid, the source of royal commissions. The isolation of Spanish art from the art of the rest of Europe ended, with the arrival of French and Italian artists, who were invited to decorate the royal palace. It also brought new works of art leaning toward the extreme, including the torturedThe Head of Saint Paul byJuan Alonso Villabrille y Ron, along with more delicate works, including a sculpture of Saint Florentine byFrancisco Salzillo.[citation needed]
The reign ofCharles III of Spain (1760–1788), brought an abrupt end to the Spanish Baroque, and a transition to neoclassicism. The King decreed in 1777 that all altar sculptures and retables had to be approved in advance by the Royal Academy of San Fernando, and that marble and stone, not wood, should be used whenever possible in sculpture.[citation needed]
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The earliest Baroque sculptor and architect to work in Latin America wasPedro de Noguera (1580-), who was born in Barcelona and apprenticed inSeville. In 1619 he moved to theViceroyalty of Peru, where, with Martín Alonso de Mesa, he sculpted the Baroque choir stalls of theCathedral Basilica of Lima (1619-).
The Baroque style of sculpture was transported to other parts of Latin America by Spanish and Portuguese missionaries in the 18th century, who commissioned local artists. It was used primarily in churches. TheQuito School in Ecuador was an important group of Baroque sculptors. Prominent artists of the school includedBernardo de Legarda andCaspicara.
Caspicara (1723–1796) was an Ecuadorean artist who made elegant and ornate figures for display in churches. He was a central figure in what is known as theQuito School.
Aleijadinho (1730 or 1738 to 1814), was the son of a Portuguese colonist and an African slave. He is notable for a group of monumentalsoapstone statues of Saints (1800–1805) for theSantuário de Bom Jesus de Matosinhos inCongonhas, now a UNESCO World Heritage Site. He also made a series of life-sized Passion figures, depicting the events leading to the Crucifixion of Christ (1780–90).