Adriaen de Vries

Dutch sculptor
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Quick Facts
Born:
1545/46, The Hague
Died:
December 15, 1626, Prague
Movement / Style:
Mannerism

Adriaen de Vries (born 1545/46, The Hague—died December 15, 1626, Prague) was a Dutch Mannerist sculptor known for his bronze sculpture groups, many of which were made for the court of Holy Roman Emperor Rudolf II.

De Vries left his homeland, where there was little interest in sculpture at the time, and he never returned. In Florence he studied under Giambologna, the leading Italian Mannerist sculptor of his day. De Vries lived for a time in Rome and later worked for Charles Emmanuel, duke of Savoy, and as court sculptor (from 1601) under Rudolf II in Prague.

Among De Vries’s most significant and well-known works are the Hercules Fountain (1596–1602) and the Mercury Fountain (1599), monumental Italianate bronze works created in Augsburg. His Psyche with Pandora’s Box is a characteristic example of his style—shimmering satin finish, spiraling complexity, and a soaring grace.

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This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.