Jef Lambeaux | |
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Birth name | Joseph Lambeaux |
Born | 14 January 1852 Antwerp |
Died | 5 June 1908 Brussels |
(aged 56)
Nationality | Belgian |
Field | Sculpture |
Works | Temple of Human Passions |
Patrons | Jean Geefs |
Jef Lambeaux (Antwerp, 14 January 1852 - Brussels 5 June 1908) was a Belgian sculptor born in Antwerp. He studied at the Antwerp Academy of Fine Arts, and was a pupil of Jean Geefs. His first work, War, was exhibited in 1871, and was followed by a long series of humorous groups, including Children dancing, Say Good Morning, The Lucky Number and; An Accident (1875). He then went to Paris, where he executed The Beggar and The Blini Pauper for the Belgian salons, and produced The Kiss (1881), generally regarded as his masterpiece. After visiting Italy, where he was much impressed by the works of Jean Boulogne, he showed a strong predilection for effects of force and motion.
Other notable works include his Brabo fountain in Antwerp (1886), Robbing the Eagles Eyrie (1890), Drunkenness (1893), The Triumph of Woman, The Bitten Faun (which created a great stir at the Exposition Universelle at Liege in 1905), and The Human Passions, a colossal marble bas-relief, elaborated from a sketch exhibited in 1889. Of his numerous busts may be mentioned those of Hendrik Conscience, and of Charles Buls, the burgomaster of Brussels. He died on the 6th of June 1908.
In 2006 the association "ASBL Musée Jef Lambeaux" was set up to promote the creation of a museum dedicated to the artist in Saint-Gilles, Belgium.[1] The museum was already promised by the municipality of Saint-Gilles in 1898 but never built.[2]
External images | |
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Search for Jef Lambeaux in Europeana.eu |