- John Hogan (sculptor)
John Hogan (
October 14 1800 – 1858) was one ofIreland s' greatestsculptors .Hogan was born on
October 14 ,1800 in Tallow, Co. Waterford, and spent his youth in the city of Cork,Ireland and in 1812 was placed as clerk to an attorney. Disliking this occupation, he chose to be apprenticed to thearchitect SirThomas Deane , where his talents for drawing andcarving were developed. He was sent toRome where he resided and cultivated his skills for many years.Hogan's best known work and masterpiece are the three versions of the statue of "The Redeemer in Death" or "The Dead Christ". Created in flawless
Carrara marble , the first version (1829) is located in St. Therese's Church,Dublin ,Ireland , the second (1833) in St. Finbarr's (South) Church, Cork,Ireland and the third and final version (1854) is located in theBasilica of St. John The Baptist , Newfoundland. Other works by Hogan include the "Sleeping Shepherd" and "The Drunken Faun".Hogan assured his international reputation in 1829 with "The Dead Christ"; thereafter, his creations were snapped up by Irish bishops visiting his Rome studio, and Hogan was pronounced by the Danish sculptor
Bertel Thorwaldsen as "the best sculptor I leave after me in Rome."Carlow Cathedral was started in 1828 and completed in 1833, and was the brain-child of the Bishop of Kildare and Leighlin, James Doyle (J.K.L.), a prominent champion ofCatholic Emancipation , who died the year after the Cathedral was opened and is interred in its walls. A sculpture, by John Hogan, in memorial to the Bishop was finished in 1839. [cite web | title=Carlow Cathedral | work=Carlow Town.com | url=http://www.carlowtown.com/info_tosee.asp| accessdate=2007-12-09]References
External links
* [http://www.irishgraves.com/_private/h/john_hogan.htm John Hogan at Irish Graves]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.