'' (1st century BCE) compositionally influenced Carpeaux's
Ugolino and His Sons Carpeaux won the
Prix de Rome in 1854. While in Rome, he stayed in the
French Academy in Rome's
Villa Medici and studied the works of
Michelangelo. Carpeaux's Ugolino was prototyped on Michelangelo's works from three centuries prior, particularly his
Last Judgment panel of the
Sistine Chapel. The children's anatomy was based on naturalistic observation. He sketched dying children as part of his preparation. He was compositionally influenced by
Laocoön and His Sons at the Vatican. Carpeaux completed the work in the last year of his residence at the French Academy in Rome. The sculpture was cast in bronze in 1863 by the
French Ministry of Fine Arts and displayed in the Parisian
Tuileries to accompany a replica of
Laocoön. A marble version was completed in Paris under Carpeaux's supervision for the owner of the
Saint-Béat marble quarry to exhibit at the
1867 International Exposition. This version was later acquired by the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in
New York City. == Reception ==