List of works by Antoine Bourdelle
List of works by Antoine Bourdelle is an incomplete list of artworks by the French artist Antoine Bourdelle.
Antoine Bourdelle (31 October 1861 – 1 October 1929), born Émile Antoine Bordelles,[1] was an influential and prolific French sculptor, painter, and teacher. His studio became the Musée Bourdelle, an art museum dedicated to his work, located at 18, rue Antoine Bourdelle, in the 15th arrondissement of Paris, France.
In 1905, he mounted an exhibition of his work at the Galerie Hébrard in Paris, showing 38 sculptures, 18 paintings and 21 drawings. The sculptures included "La Nonne" from 1888 as well as the "Head of Apollo" and his "Great Tragic Mask of Beethoven". Bourdelle's father died in 1906 and in 1909 he left Rodin's studio. The year 1910, saw his "Héraklès tue les oiseaux du lac Stymphale" of 1909 shown at the Salon and this was a huge success! A version of this work is held in the Musée d'Orsay. Whilst working as a sculptor he also taught at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière in Montparnasse, his pupils including Alberto Giacometti, Aristide Maillol, René Iché and Germaine Richier. 1910 also saw his divorce from Stéphanie Van Parys and in 1911 Rhodia Bourdelle was born to him and Cléopâtre Sévastos. In 1913 an exhibition of modern art in New York included his "Héraklès" and "Tête d’Apollon", the commission for the monument to Genéral Alvéar in Argentina was formalized and he carried out the sculptures for the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées. He founded and was vice president of the Salon des Tuileries.[2]
Many works by Bourdelle can be seen in the Musée Bourdelle- "Buste de Beethoven", "Adam", "Le bélier rétif", "Centaure mourant", "La Liberté" and "Vierge à l'enfant". From 1922 to 1923 he worked on "La Vierge à l’offrande" and completed the maquette for "La France". He also completed "La Naissance d’Aphrodite" for the Marseille Opera House. In 1925 he exhibited at the Exposition internationale des Arts décoratifs showing "Sappho", "Le Livre" and "Masque de Bourdelle" in the Pavillon du livre. 1926 finally saw his Alvéar monument inaugurated after 10 years of work and a version of "La France" was exhibited at the Salon des Tuileries. 1928 saw a retrospective exhibition to celebrate the inauguration of the Brussels Palais des Beaux-Arts and 1929, the year of his death, saw the Monument to Adam Mickiewicz inaugurated. Bourdelle died on the 1 October 1929 at Vésinet whilst a guest of the founder Rudier. In 1931 there was a great retrospective of Bourdelle's work at the Paris Orangerie. He is buried in Montparnasse cemetery. In 1924 he had been made Commandeur de l'Ordre de la Légion d'honneur.[2]
War memorials
Name | Location | Date | Notes |
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"Monument aux Combattants et Défenseurs du Tarn-et-Garonne de 1870-71" | Montauban | 1893 to 1902 | This monument dedicated to those men of the Tarn-et-Garonne region who gave their lives in the Franco-Prussian war was Bourdelle's first major commission. It had long been the practice in France to award commissions to local born artists but given his inexperience Bourdelle was fortunate to be approached as early as 1893 and finally chosen in 1897 for what was a most prestigious work. A maquette was submitted to the adjudicating committee and Bourdelle set about the commission, creating many plaster studies along the way as was his practice. He executed some 49 studies for the four heads involved, 34 in full size and submitted some to the Salon of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts- "Dragon sur Rocher" in 1897 and "Figures Hurlantes" in 1899. Many of the plaster casts involved were sadly lost when on their return from a Belgian foundry, who had made several bronze casts, they were badly damaged; the foundry had sent them back by railway without adequate packaging/protection! Only the "Grand Guerrier de Montauban" could be restored. The complete monument was shown at the Salon of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts in 1902 and finally erected in that year. The composition moved away from that traditionally used for such memorials. Louis Gillet the art critic described the work as a "tumultuous mass" which seems wholly appropriate but many critics were scathing in their comments. One critic described the work as "A Hottentot horror...denying the laws of anatomy" Bourdelle had moved away from the banality of the usual war memorial compositions with wounded soldiers in heroic poses and people with flags, etc., etc. and vividly shows the horror of war "Il a la vision de la mort brutale; ses têtes sont expressives, démentes..." |
Toulouse War Memorial (monument aux morts) | Toulouse | 1909 | This memorial stands in the Place Héracles in Toulouse and is known as the "Monument aux Sports". It uses Bourdelle's 1909 "Hercules the Archer" ("Héraklès tue les oiseaux du lac Stymphale") as it's centre-piece and was erected in memory of all those sportsmen who died in the 1914-1918 war including the Toulouse rugby player Alfred Mayssonnié.[5] |
"La France" | Briançon | 1920-1923 | The bronze statue in Briançon is one of several castings of the Bourdelle work "La France". It was after the 1914-1918 war that a project was launched to create a sculpture to commemorate the 1917 entry of the United States of America into that war and the architects Ventre et Damour were asked to design it. The first thoughts were to erect the monument at the Pointe de Grave near where the Americans had disembarked in 1917 and the architects had the idea of constructing a lighthouse in front of which would be placed a colossal statue depicting France searching the horizon for a sight of the Americans. At first the commission to create the statue was given to Albert Bartholomé but he persuaded his colleague Bourdelle to accept it and Bourdelle had the first maquette ready in 1922. Meanwhile, the building of the lighthouse had gone ahead but consumed the major part of the funds allocated for the project, leaving little to fund Bourdelle moving to the next point. Bourdelle however managed to complete a version of the work but with a height of 4.5m, half the full size planned, which was shown at the 1923 Salon. The French State then asked Bourdelle to execute the statue in the full 9 metres height which was then cast in bronze and used to decorate the entrance to the Grand Palaisat the 1925 Éxposition des Arts Décoratifs. Bourdelle based the central figure on Athena and she carries a lance and shield and wears a helmet. After the exhibition closed the sculpture was put into storage with the intention of using it at some future date as part of the project to build a "Palais des Arts Décoratifs Modernes" but whilst languishing in storage it was seen by Maurice Petsche, the Under Secretary of State for the Arts and the Parliamentary Deputy for Briançon, who acquired it for his town's war memorial where it was erected on a spot overlooking the Durance valley near Vauban's great fortress above the town. Another cast was made for the Montauban monument aux morts. The statue commemorating the entry of the Americans into the war was never erected by the lighthouse built in the Pointe de Grave and the lighthouse was in fact blown up by the Germans during the 1940s occupation. However another bronze casting, 9 meter high, was made by Rudier, and this graced the terrace of Algier's Musée des Beaux-arts but in 1961 and just before Algerian independence, the monument, a symbol of France and Gaullism, was dynamited by the OAS. The fragments of Bourdelle's work were returned to France and the work was reassembled and can be seen in the Coëtquidan"Musée du Souvenir" at the École St-Cyr although the group of serpents which stood next to the figure of France in Bourdelle's original composition and part of the lance carried by the figure were lost. A fourth casting was carried out by the Hohwiller foundry and this was erected outside the Palais de Tokyo as part of a monument honouring the "Free French" and the "call" of 18 June 1940 by de Gaulle. See later entry. Bourdelle himself believed "La France" to be his greatest masterpiece.[2] Casts of the 4.60m version are held by the Brooklyn Museum and others. |
Montceau-les-Mines War memorial (monument aux morts) | Montceau-les-Mines | 1924 to 1928 | It was on the 17 November 1918, only days after the war had ended, that Montceau-les-Mines decided to erect a memorial to those 690 sons of Montceau-les-Mines who had lost their lives in the 1914-1918 conflict. A competition was organized and the award decisions made. However it was only many years later that the monument was erected for although the commission went to Bourdelle he did not like the designs proposed by the adjudicating committee and had his own ideas on the form the monument would take. Above all he wanted the monument to stress that the men honoured were from the mining industry. He began his work in 1919 and actually visited the mines to make studies. When the monument was completed in 1930 the sculptor had
died, but what emerged was a unique monument which consists of a square pedestal on which sits a representation of a miner's lamp. The pedestal bears four bas-reliefs, executed between 1924 and 1928, each measuring 2.40m by 1.45m. One depicts three miners working in the pit using the tools which would have been used in the 1920s including a lamp. Another shows a miner who has enlisted and is saying farewells to his mother, sister and/or wife. In the third, three sappers are shown in a tunnel fixing support shafts whilst in the final relief we have a dead soldier held in the arms of a winged angel who represents the motherland and wears a phrygian bonnet. In her hand she holds the soldier's medal. Below the bas-reliefs are lists of the dead, not just those from Monceau but also those from the neighbouring villages of Blanzy, Ciry, Gourdon, Saint-Bérain and Pouilloux. At a later date the names of those lost in the Second World war were added. In 1956, Bourdelle's monument appeared on a postage stamp in an engraving by Pierre Munier. The stamp celebrated the hundredth anniversary of the establishment of the mining town. [9] |
The National Monument of the Hartmannswillerkopf | Soultz-Haut-Rhin Hartmannswillerkopf Col-du-Silberloch | 1922-24 | The National Monument of the Hartmannswillerkopf was inaugurated on 9 October 1932 and is in fact a crypt carved from the mountain's bedrock. The entrance is approached by a cutting from the road and is flanked by two bronze over-life-size "Angels of Victory" by Bourdelle. Inside the crypt and covered by a large bronze shield is an ossuary which contains the remains of 12,000 unidentified soldiers. There are also Protestant and Jewish altars and a Catholic chapel. On the esplanade, which is situated above the crypt, is the "Altar de la Patrie" with the cast of the intermediate size of the work "la Vierge à l'Offrande". Behind the monument is a French Military cemetery and ossuary.[2] |
War Memorial Montauban-monument aux morts | Montauban | 1921 | It was in 1919 that a committee was set up to organize Montauban's 1914-1918 war memorial and the commission went to Bourdelle in 1921. The huge temple, an integral part of the monument, was not completed until 1930 and the inauguration until 1932 and, as he died in 1929, Bourdelle was not to see his sculpture "in situ". Bourdelle's statue, his "La France" (see entry above) is 9 metres high and stands before a white pillared temple like structure. In her right arm the female allegory has a long vertical lance whilst her left arm is raised in a gesture of victory. She carries a shield on which is depicted St Michel slaying the dragon ("the victory of good over evil"). This female allegory stands in front of the temple which is 20 metres high and has 12 pillars. |
"Le monument de la France libre"-The monument to the "Free French" | Palais de Tokyo Paris | 1948 | This monument is dedicated to the Free French and stands outside the Palais de Tokyo. Bourdelle's allegory of "La France" has at her feet the words of Charles Péguy"Mère voici vos fils qui se sont tant battus" and below that the Cross of Lorraine, the symbol of the Free French movement, with the dedication "Aux volontaires des Forces Françaises Libres morts / pour l'honneur et la Liberté de la France / 18 juin 1940 - 8 mai 1945" |
Capoulet-et-Junac War Memorial. (monument aux morts) | Capoulet-et-Junac | The three figures in Bourdelle's composition represent fear, suffering and death ("la peur", "la souffrance" and "la mort") and were shown in 1899 under the title "La Guerre, les figures hurlantes". Originally intended to form part of the Montauban monument to the dead of the 1870 war they were not in fact used for this work but used at Capoulet-et-Junac independently when the mayor Paul Voivenel asked Bourdelle's widow to allow the work to be reproduced and cast in bronze for the Capoulet-et-Junac war memorial. The sculpture certainly recreates the horror which must have been experienced by those fighting in the trenches[14] | |
Trôo War memorial (monument aux morts) | Trôo | Bourdelle worked on this rather sombre war memorial which has little sculptural content. | |
Apart from the war memorials mentioned above Bourdelle also worked on a "Monument aux Députés morts pour La France", a memorial honouring the Deputies who had died in the 1914-1918 war. He was keen on placing the memorial in the central niche of the Salle du Roi in the Palais Bourbon, a room dominated by Delacroix' paintings and designed the memorial so as not to clash with these works. The female figure in the statue, said to be based on Isadora Duncan, held a huge short sword and held aloft a round shell of the type carried by Greek hoplites. The piece was called "La Victoir du Droit". Bourdelle completed the maquette, the intention being that the final marble statue would be 3.25m high. Sadly the project was not pursued by the French State.[2]
Bourdelle's 1922/23 "La Vierge à l'Offrande" or "Vierge à l'Enfant" in grey chauvigny limestone at Niederbruck, although not an actual war memorial, was directly linked to the 1914-1918 war. Léon Vogt, a pupil of Bourdelle, owned potash mines in Alsace and in 1914 his mother vowed that if the family property was kept from destruction during the war she would commission a statue to celebrate this. She died during the war but after the war,Léon commissioned Bourdelle to execute a suitable statue. Bourdelle completed various studies and the second study, enlarged to 2.5m, was placed in the crypt at Hartmannswillerkopf. The same study but now 6m high was placed on the slope of the wooded hill above Niederbruck in the Manavaux valley to fulfil Mme Voigt's vow. The work was exhibited in the "Section d'Art Religieux" at the Salon d'Automne" of 1921-1922.[2] In Bourdelle's work the baby Jesus is held above her shoulder by the Virgin Mary, His arms are outstretched so his body takes on the form of a Cross. The inscription on the statue also gives thanks for Alsace-Lorraine's return to France after the war.
"En reconnaissance de la protection divine sur la vallée de Masevaux et du retour de l’Alsace-Lorraine à la France les époux Joseph Vogt 1914-1918"
Images of Bourdelle's War Memorials
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"La France" at Briançon.
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View of Montceau-les-Mines War Memorial in front of the parish church. We can see the bas-relief showing a soldier saying his farewells before going off to war and the reproduction of a miner’s lamp.
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Monument honouring the "Free French". Bourdelle here used his work "La France".
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One of the two Bourdelle's statues by the entrance of the National Monument of the Hartmannswillerkopf.
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Héraklès archer de Toulouse. Monument in memory of the dead athletes to the 1914-1918 war
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The Montauban memorial to the dead of the 1870 Franco-Prussian war.
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Montauban's Great War memorial consisting of an allegory of a victorious France standing before a white 12 pillared temple. Again Bourdelle used his "La France" composition.
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Capoulet-et-Junac War Memorial. An evocation of the horrors of war.
Busts by Bourdelle
Louis Gillet wrote
"..no one has made more beautiful busts than those of Koeberle, Anatole France, M.Simu, Auguste Perret and Sir James Fraser"[3]
Here are details of some of these busts including the acclaimed studies of Beethoven which occupied Bourdelle over a long period of time. Bourdelle often submitted portrait busts to the Salons in the hope of attracting commissions. The bust "Adam" was submitted to the Salon des Artists Français in 1888 and he had submitted his bust of Armand Saintis in 1884, Delard in 1885, the actor "Marais" in 1886 and "La Marquise Silvia de Mari" and "St Merlatti" in 1887.[2]
Name | Location | Date | Notes |
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Bust of Emile Garrisson | Montauban. Musée Ingres | 1885 | A plaster bust of this Montauban personality.[20] |
Coquelin Ainé (Benoît-Constant Coquelin) | Musée Bourdelle, Paris | A bronze bust of the elder Coquelin brother.[21] | |
Bust of Coquelin Cadet (Ernest Alexandre Honoré Coquelin) | Musée Bourdelle, Paris | 1891 | A bust in bronze of the younger Coquelin entitled "Coquelin Cadet en Mascarille". Mascarille was one of Moliére's great characters.[22] |
Bust of Achille Bouïs | Montauban. Musée Ingres | 1882 | A bust in terracotta of the Montauban photographer.[23] |
Bust of Célestin Argaud | Toulouse. Musée des Augustins | 1885 | A work in terracotta[24] |
Busts of Félicien Champsaur and his wife Madame Champsaur | Whereabouts not known. | 1891 | Champsaur was an influential art critic who became a close friend. He wrote a highly complimentary article on Bourdelle for the " Courier de Montauban". These two busts were shown at the Société National des Beaux-Arts Salon of 1891.[2] |
Bust of François Moulenq | Montauban ; Musée Ingres | 1894 | A work commissioned by the Société Archéologique de Tarn-et-Garonne. Bourdelle executed two versions. One is held by the Montauban Musée Ingres and a smaller version with a terracotta coloured patina is held in Valence d'Agen's mairie.[25] |
"Beethoven aux grands cheveux" | Montauban ; Musée Ingres | 1891 | When a young man Bourdelle was said to have looked very much like Beethoven which might explain his obsession with creating portraits of him.[2]"Beethoven with long hair", is one of Bourdelle's best known depictions of Beethoven. A work in plaster depicting a windswept Beethoven which is inscribed "Mon doémaine c'est l'air / quand le vent se lève / mon âme tourbillonne" In 1888 Bourdelle had produced his "Beethoven, la joue appuyée sur une main"- Beethoven with cheek resting on one hand".[26] |
Bronze bust of Léon Cladel | Montauban. Musée Ingres | 1894 | Cladel the French writer was a good friend of Bourdelle and after his death in 1892 a committee was formed to organize a sculpture, Bourdelle received the commission, and the resultant bust was erected in one of Montauban's public squares in 1894. In 1937 it was transferred to the Ingres museum who also hold the plaster version.[27] |
Bust of Dr.Fege | Mont-de-Marsan. Musée de la ville | 1900 | The original plaster version is held by the Musée Bourdelle.[28] |
Beethoven ( "à la colonne") | Montauban. Musée Ingres | 1901 | The years 1901 to 1910 were to see further studies of Beethoven. Apart from "à la colonne", 1901 saw him execute "Beethoven, Grand Masque Tragique", 1902 "Beethoven, dit Metropolitan", 1903 the "Large Beethoven, resting on his Arm" and "Beethoven assis au rocher", 1904 to 1908 saw "Beethoven dans le vent" and 1908 saw the bronze "Beethoven with Two Hands", and 1910 "Beethoven drapé". The composition "à la colonne" was a variation on the small depiction of Beethoven known as the "dit Metropolitan" a plaster work presented to the Paris salon in 1902 and inscribed with Beethoven's words "Moi je suis Bacchus / qui pressure pour les hommes / son nectar délicieux"[29][30] |
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres | Musée Bourdelle | 1907 | Bust of the great French painter.[31]
|
Bust of Rodin | Montauban ; Musée Ingres | 1909 | A work in terracotta. Shown at the Paris salon of 1910.[32] |
Auguste Quercy | Montauban. Jardin des Plantes | 1911 | The Bourdelle bust of the poet is positioned on a pedestal. Quercy was a good friend of Bourdelle and played an active role in promoting Bourdelle's work in Montauban. He chaired the committee which organised the award to Bourdelle for Léon Cladel's bust and was a force behind securing Bourdelle the commission for the Montauban 1870 War Memorial.[33][34] |
Bust of Tristan Corbière | Musée Bourdelle | 1912 | A bronze of the French poet.[35] |
Eugène Koeberlé | Musée d'Orsay | 1914 | A bronze bust of Dr.Koeberlé, an Alsatian surgeon who is credited for developing a precursor of present-day surgical hemostats[36][37] |
Onésime Reclus | Musée Despiau-Wlérick. Mont-de-Marsan | 1915 | A plaster bust.[38] |
Anatole France | Musée d'Orsay | 1919 | A bronze bust cast by Alexis and Eugène Rudier.[39]
|
Sir James Frazer | Musée Ingres, Montauban | 1922 | There are many copies of this work around. Sir James George Frazer was an eminent anthropologist, whose widely-read 1890 book "The Golden Bough" traced recurrent patterns in the myths and religious practices of early cultures around the world. Of this bust Frazer wrote "I don’t know if in fact my face has all that gravity, all that philosophical profundity; but... I should be glad if after my death this portrait alone was kept and all the others destroyed"[40][41] |
Auguste Perret | Musée d'Orsay | 1922 | A bronze bust of the French architect who was a pioneer in the use of reinforced concrete. The bust was first shown at the Salon des Tuileries in 1923. Cast by Alexis Rudier.[42] |
Cathedrals and churches
Name | Location | Date | Notes | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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"Jeanne d'Arc au Sacre" | La collégiale Notre-Dame de l'Assomption.Vitry-le-François | 1909 | Bourdelle's statue of Joan of Arc is located in La chapelle Sainte Jeanne d'Arc. Bourdelle produced a maquette for this work in 1909 and exhibited the definitive version at that year's Salon d'Automne. It is a stone sculpture with a height of 2.31 metre and shows Joan of Arc carrying her standard or banner at the coronation of Charles VII in the Cathedral of Reims[43] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
"Jeanne d'Arc à l'étendard" or "Jeanne d'Arc au Sacre" | Cathédrale Saint-André. Bordeaux | 1909 | The stone statue executed for Vitry-le-François proved such a success that casts in bronze were commissioned for Bordeaux and another church.[2] The Bordeaux bronze was cast by Eugène Rudier in 1910. The plaster model is held by the Bordeaux Musée des Beaux-Arts. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
"Jeanne d'Arc à l'étendard" | Église Saint-Église Saint-Martin Barentin | 1909 | A copy of the 1909 work mentioned above but in reinforced concrete. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Église Notre-Dame du Raincy | Le Raincy | 1922 | For this church, designed by Auguste Perret and his brother Gustave, Boudelle executed a Pietà for the tympanum over the church's entrance. The church, built in reinforced concrete, the Perret "trade mark", is regarded as the first "modern" French church.
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In 1916 Bourdelle also created a small votive depicting St Barbe which is held by the Lyon Musée des Beaux-Arts. Bourdelle was asked to create the votive by the family of his brother-in-law, Dr Couchoud as protection for their son who was away fighting in the artillery. Originally it was placed in the church of St Julien de l'Herm near Lyon before being transferred to the museum.[2] The piece is in polychromed cement. There are copies of the work located in Stockholm, Rome, Bruxelles and Luxembourg.[47]
Works in Musée d'Orsay
Main works
Images of Mickievicz monument including bas-reliefs
Main works (continued)
References
External linksMedia related to Sculptures by Antoine Bourdelle at Wikimedia Commons |