Peter Clodt von Jürgensburg

Russian sculptor
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroRussian sculptor
A.K.A.Pyotr Klodt Baron P. K. von Jurgensburg Klodt Peter Jacob Clodt von Jürgensburg Pyotr Karlovich Klodt von Yurgensburg Peter Yakob Klodt von Yurgensburg Peter Clodt
A.K.A.Pyotr Klodt Baron P. K. von Jurgensburg Klodt Peter Jacob Clodt von Jürgensburg Pyotr Karlovich Klodt von Yurgensburg Peter Yakob Klodt von Yurgensburg Peter Clodt
PlacesRussia
wasArtist Sculptor Painter
Work fieldArts
Gender
Male
Birth5 June 1805, Saint Petersburg
Death20 November 1867Finland (aged 62 years)
Family
Father:Carl Gustav Clodt von Jürgensburg
Children:Michail Petrowitsch Klodt
The details

Biography

Baron Peter Clodt von Jürgensburg, known in Russian as Pyotr Karlovich Klodt (Russian: Пётр Карлович Клодт; 1805 – 1867), was a favourite sculptor of Nicholas I of Russia.

Biography

Stemming from a distinguished family of Baltic Germans, the Clodt von Jürgensburgs, Klodt started his career as a professional artillery officer and amateur sculptor. He attended the classes at the St.Petersburg Imperial Academy of Arts, where his mastery in depicting horses eventually won him the rank of academician and a praise of the tsar. As a legend has it, Nicholas I remarked to Klodt that he "creates horses finer than any prize stallion does".

Klodt's most famous group of horse sculptures, the Horse Tamers, was installed at the Anichkov Bridge in 1851. He was also responsible for the bronze statue of Ivan Krylov in the Summer Garden (1848–55). It was the first monument to a poet erected in the Russian Empire.

Klodt collaborated with Vasily Demut-Malinovsky on the statue of Saint Vladimir in Kiev and the statuary for the Narva Triumphal Gate. He also sculpted a quadriga above the portico of the Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow.

Klodt's last significant work was a posthumous tribute to his patron, a horse statue for the equestrian Monument to Nicholas I on Saint Isaac's Square, which has the distinction of being the first equestrian statue in the world with merely two support points (the rear feet of the horse). Even the Bolsheviks, who destroyed all the memorials to Nicholas I across Russia, did not dare to demolish this unique statue.

Klodt died in his estate in the Grand Duchy of Finland (Autonomous state of the Russian Empire) on 20 November 1867. His son and nephew Mikhail continued the artistic traditions of the family and became notable painters of the Peredvizhniki school.

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