Marly Horses

Local nameLes Chevaux de Marly
LocationMarly-le-Roi, France

The Marly Horses are two 1743–1745 Carrara marble sculpted groups by Guillaume Coustou, showing two rearing horses with their groom. They were commissioned by Louis XV of France for the trough at the entrance to the grounds of his château de Marly. Coustou's last works, they were intended to replace two other sculpted groups, Mercury on Pegasus and Pegasus, Renown of Horses, both by Antoine Coysevox, which had been removed to the Tuileries Gardens in 1719.

Louis XV chose the modellos in 1743 and the full-size sculptures were completed in only two years, being installed at Marly in 1745. They proved highly successful in reproduction, particularly on a smaller scale, and prefigured Théodore Géricault and other Romantic artists' obsession with equestrian subjects. The Marly horses were later also used as the central motif of the monochrome 819-line RTF/ORTF test card which was used on TF1 from 1953 until 1983.

Tags ArtworkSculpture
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More information and contact

Wikipedia https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marly_Horses

Address 2 Avenue de l'Abreuvoir, 78160, France

Coordinates 48°51'58.423" N 2°6'5.897" E

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