CANOVA, ANTONIO (ka-no'va), an Italian sculptor, born in Possagno, Nov. 1, 1757. He was first an apprentice to a statuary in Bassano, from whom he went to the Academy of Venice, where he had a brilliant career. In 1779 he was sent by the senate of Venice to Rome, and there produced his Theseus and the Slain Minotaur. In 1783 Canova undertook the execution of the tomb of Pope Clem ent XIV. in the Church of the Apostles, a work in the Bernini manner, and in ferior to his second public monument, the tomb of Pope Clement XIII. (1792), in St. Peter's. From 1783 his fame rapidly increased. He established a school for the benefit of young Venetians, and among other works produced his group of "Venus and Adonis," the "Psyche and Butterfly," a "Repentant Magda lene," the well-known "Hebe," the colos sal "Hercules hurling Lichas into the Sea," the "Pugilists," and the group of "Cupid and Psyche." In 1796 and 1797 Canova finished the model of the cele brated tomb of the Archduchess Chris tina of Austria, and in 1797 made the colossal model of a statue of the King of Naples executed in marble in 1803.
He afterward executed in Rome his "Perseus with the Head of Medusa," which, when the "Belvidere Apollo" was carried to France, was thought not un worthy of its place and pedestal. In 1802 he was invited by Bonaparte to Paris to make the model of his colossal statue. Among the later works of the artist are a colossal Washington, the tombs of the Cardinal of York and of Pius VII • a "Venus Rising from the Bath"; the colossal group of "Theseus Killing the Minotaur"; the tomb of Al fieri; the "Graces Rising from the Bath"; a "Dancing Girl"• a colossal "Hector"; a "Paris"; a "Mars and Ve nus," etc. After the second fall of Napo leon, in 1815, Canova was commissioned by the Pope to demand the restoration of the works of art carried from Rome. He went from Paris to London, and re turned to Rome in 1816, where he was made Marquis of Ischia, with a pension of 3,000 scudi. He died in Venice, Oct. 13, 1822.