Henri Alfred Jacquemart
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Henri Alfred Marie Jacquemart (February 24, 1824 - January 4, 1896), often known as Alfred Jacquemart, was a noted French sculptor and animalier.
Jacquemart was born in Paris, studied painting and sculpture at the École des Beaux-Arts as a pupil of Paul Delaroche, exhibited at the Paris Salon from 1847-1879, and received a number of honors. He traveled in Egypt and Turkey, and was commissioned by the city of Alexandria, Egypt, to create a colossal stature of Muhammad Ali of Egypt. Ultimately, however, he earned his reputation for his many monuments in France. In 1870 Jaquemart became a Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur.
[edit] Selected works
- Sphinxes, La Fontaine du Palmier, Place du Châtelet, 1858.
- Viceroy Mohammed Ali, Alexandria, ordered April 1869.
- Four lions by Jacquemart, originally meant to stand guard by the statue of Mohammed Ali, but fattened and lengthened by two meters and placed at the opposite entrances of Kasr Al Nil Bridge, Cairo.
- Soliman Pasha (1788-1860), 1874.
- Mohammed Laz-oglou Bey, Cairo, 1874-5.
[edit] References
- Jane Horsell, Les Animaliers, 1971.
- James Mackay, The Animaliers, 1973.
- Christopher Payne, Animals in Bronze, 1986.
- Pierre Kjellberg, Bronzes of the 19th Century, 1994.
- George Savage, A Concise History of Bronzes, 1968.
- E. Benezit, Dictionnaire des Peintres et Sculpteurs, 1966.
- Stanaslas Lami, Dictionnaire de Sculpteurs de l'ecole Francaise, 1914.
- Bronze Gallery entry
- Insecula entry
- Cairo Statues