Louis-Ernest Barrias
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Louis-Ernest Barrias (April 13, 1841 - February 4, 1905) was a French sculptor of the Beaux-Arts school.
He was born in Paris into a family of artists. His father was a porcelain-painter, and his older brother Félix-Joseph Barrias a well-known painter. Louis-Ernest also started out as a painter, studying under Léon Cogniet, but later took up sculpture with Pierre-Jules Cavelier as teacher. In 1858 he was admitted to the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris, where his teacher was François Jouffroy. In 1865 Barrias won the Prix de Rome for study at the French Academy in Rome. Barrias was involved in the decoration of the Paris Opéra and the Hôtel de la Païva in the Champs-Élysées. His work was mostly in marble, in a Romantic realist style indebted to Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux. In 1878 he was made a knight of the Legion of Honour, an officer in 1881, and a commander in 1900. Barrias replaced Dumont at the Institut de France in 1884 then succeeded Cavelier as professor at the École des Beaux-Arts. In 1900-03 he served on the Council for the Nationakl Museums. Among his students were Josep Clarà, Charles Despiau, and Victor Segoffin.
[edit] Selected works
At the Cimetière du Père-Lachaise:
- Tomb of Thomas Couture (c. 1879)
- Tomb of Anatole de la Forge (1893)
At the Jardin des Tuileries:
At La Défense:
- La Défense (bronze) Monument to the defenders of Paris in 1870 (1880 - 1883) The plaster model was shown at the Paris salon of 1881.
At the Musée d'Orsay:
- Nature Unveiling Herself before Science (1899)
- Bust of Henri Regnault (1871)
- Nubian Alligator Hunters (1893 - 1894)
At Dreux:
- Funeral monument of the duchesse d'Alençon.[1]
In private collections:
- First Mourning, Adam and Eve carrying Abel (1878)
- Fame (c. 1893)
[edit] Image gallery
Portrait bust of the painter Henri Regnault, 1871 (Musée d'Orsay, Paris) |
[edit] Notes
- ^ Antoinette Le Normand-Romain, Mémoire de marbre. La Sculpture funéraire en France 1804-1914 (Paris) 1995.