Reclining Bacchante, (Detail), (1834), by Lorenzo Bartolini (Italian, 1777 – 1850), marble, Musée du Louvre, Paris
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Reclining Bacchante, (Detail), (1834), by Lorenzo Bartolini (Italian, 1777 – 1850), marble, Musée du Louvre, Paris

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Lorenzo Bartolini
L'Empereur Napoléon Ier, Bastia, Corse, France
Carità educatrice (Charity the Educator), Marble Sculpture (c. 1842–c. 1845) Lorenzo Bartolini (1777–1850) created this Neoclassical sculpture in Florence, Italy. The artwork personifies the virtue of Charity (Caritas) specifically in her role as an educator, a topical theme in 19th-century Tuscany.
Astyanax Thrown From the Walls of Troy, sculpture by Lorenzo Bartolini (1777-1850)

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Lorenzo Bartolini (Italian, 1777-1850) Portrait of Napoléone Elisa Baciocchi, Niece of Napoleon I, ca.1810-12 The Cleveland Museum of Art
To extend power across the continent, Napoleon arranged for his sisters to marry into the courts of Europe. The sitter is his niece, daughter of the Grand-Duke of Tuscany (the bee on her cup is a Napoleonic emblem). While the girl’s nakedness might startle us today, in the early 1800s depicting children nude emphasized their purity and innocence. The work takes its cues from ancient sculpture, and while the pet dog adds a note of tenderness, it also refers to Diana, goddess of the moon and hunt.
Bust of Charlotte Napoléone Bonaparte
By Lorenzo Bartolini
Monument to Hortense de Beauharnais by Lorenzo Bartolini