Peter Anton von Verschaffelt

Peter Anton von Verschaffelt
Born Pieter Antoon Verschaffelt
8 May 1710
Ghent, Flanders, Spanish Netherlands
Died 5 July 1793 (aged 83)
Mannheim, Electoral Palatinate, Holy Roman Empire
Known for Sculpturing, Architecting

Peter Anton von Verschaffelt (8 May 1710 – 5 July 1793) was a Flemish sculptor and architect.

Verschaffelt designed, among other things in Mannheim, the high altar of the Jesuit church (Jesuitenkirche), the arsenal and the Bretzenheim Palace, as well as the church Wallfahrtskirche Mariä Himmelfahrt in Oggersheim (now part of Ludwigshafen).

Life and work

Verschaffelt was born in Ghent, Flanders in the Spanish Netherlands, as Pieter Antoon Verschaffelt. After his apprentice years in Ghent in the workshop of his grandfather, Verschaffelt worked in Brussels, Paris and, from 1737 to 1751, in Rome.[1] In 1748, he received the commission to replace the damaged statue of the archangel Michael on the Castel Sant'Angelo in Rome, although it wasn’t installed until 1753.

In 1752 Verschaffelt moved to London. From there, he was appointed as a successor to the sculptor Paul Egell as court sculptor to Charles Theodore, Elector of the Palatinate, in Mannheim, Germany. Among his first tasks was the landscaping and statuary in the palace garden of Schwetzingen, for which he created the deer and the group of rivers, which are the key features of the park.

He died in Mannheim, Electoral Palatinate, Holy Roman Empire, aged 83.

References

  1. Metropolitan Museum of Art (1984). Notable Acquisitions, 1983-1984. New York. p. 31. ISBN 978-0870993879.

Sources

This article is based in part on material from the German Wikipedia.

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