Tuesday, January 20, 2026

François Perrier

François Perrier
Apollo Belvedere
(antique statue now in the Vatican Museums, Rome)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
The Arrotino
(antique statue now in the Uffizi, Florence)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
The Borghese Gladiator
(antique statue now in the Louvre, Paris)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
Commodus as Hercules
(antique statue now in the Vatican Museums, Rome)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
The Giustiniani Minerva
(antique statue now in the Vatican Museums, Rome)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
The Laocoön
(antique statue group now in the Vatican Museums, Rome)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
The Ludovisi Mars
(antique statue now in Museo delle Terme, Rome)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
Equestrian Marcus Aurelius
(antique statue now in the Capitoline Museum, Rome)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
Meleager
(antique statue now in the Vatican Museums, Rome)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
Niobid Group - Niobe with Daughter
(from antique statue group now in the Uffizi, Florence)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
Niobid Group - Daughter of Niobe
(from antique statue group now in the Uffizi, Florence)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
Niobid Group - Son of Niobe
(from antique statue group now in the Uffizi, Florence)
1638
etching
Philadelphia Museum of Art

François Perrier
Paetus and Arria
(antique statue group now in Museo delle Terme, Rome)
1638
etching
Hamburger-Kunsthalle

François Perrier
Papirius
(antique statue group now in Museo delle Terme, Rome)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
Standing Venus
(antique statue now in the Vatican Museums, Rome)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

François Perrier
Venus Felix
(antique statue now in the Vatican Museums, Rome)
1638
etching
Hamburger Kunsthalle

" . . . the earliest illustrated volume to be deliberately restricted to the finest antique sculpture was not published until 1638.  This consisted of a hundred prints of fewer than a hundred statues, together with one modern one (Michelangelo's Moses) and was the work of the French artist François Perrier.  It was a great success, and a companion volume of antique reliefs appeared in 1645.  The idea was imitated by other artists and publishers later in the seventeenth century, most notably by Jan de Bisschop, Sandrart and Bartoli, and, in the late eighteenth century, by Francesco Piranesi; but Perrier's books were cheap, frequently reprinted and were probably more popular than these rival and superior volumes.  As late as the 1820s Flaxman was referring his students at the Royal Academy to Perrier, and the presence of a statue in his anthology was likely to establish or confirm a reputation in a way that had not been possible in the earlier, less restrictive compilations."

– Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny, Taste and the Antique: the Lure of Classical Sculpture (Yale University Press, 1981)