Thomas Boudin (1570 - 24 March 1637) was a French sculptor. He was born and died in Paris.

Life

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Born into a family of artists active in Paris and its environs, he lived in the parish of Saint Eustache on rue Montorgueil.[1] His father Guillaume Boudin (1567-1614) and his son Barthélémy Boudin were both also sculptors,[2] with the latter named after his godfather Barthélemy Tremblay, a sculptor to the king.[1] His eldest son Guillaume was baptised in 1604, with one of the godfathers being Guillaume Périer, another sculptor to the king.[1]

He was apprenticed to Mathieu Jacquet in 1584 and remained in his studio until 1595. He was made official sculptor to the king in 1606 and in 1607-1608 he had two daughters. He was one of the signatories of the statutes of the community of master painters and sculptors as revised on 16 January 1619.

Works

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Les Boudin et les Bourdin : deux familles de sculpteurs de la première moitié du XVIIe siècle" (in French). 2015.
  2. ^ Jules Guiffrey, « Tombeau de Sully à Nogent-le-Rotrou par le sculpteur parisien Barthélemy Boudin (1642) », in Revue de l'art français ancien et moderne, 1895, 3e série, p. 361-366 (read online).

Bibliography

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  • (in French) « Marché passé par Thomas Boudin, sculpteur du roi, pour l'exécution de l'autel des Corps Saints dans l'abbaye de Saint-Denis, 29 août 1626 », in Nouvelles archives de l'art français, 1897, 3e série, tome XIII, p. 61-74 (read online)
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