Antoine-Louis Barye (1796 - French 1875)

Transcription

Antoine-Louis Barye (1796 - French 1875)
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Antoine-Louis Barye (1796 - French 1875)
Reclining Greyhound, 1868
Bronze
Artist Biography :
Antoine-Louis Barye's beginnings as an artist were, to say the least, humble. After a basic education he was
apprenticed to a die maker called Fourier and from this, developed an interest in working with metal. After spending
two years in the army he entered the studios of Bosio, a typical academician. However, he soon became
discontented with the style of work imposed upon him, and while still with Bosio he studied under Baron Gros
whose work held more interest for Barye, as he had become more attracted to the broad free ideas of the Romantic
movement.
At the age of 23, Barye made his first entry at the Salon, in the section of medals and hoped to win a Prix de Rome.
Although he received an honourable mention, it would be twelve years before he received recognition. By 1824
Barye's domestic commitments, supporting a wife and family, required that he take a job with a fashionable
goldsmith, Fauconier. A commission received through Fauconier for a stag led Barye to undertake a serious study
of zoology and anatomy at the Jardin des Plantes. The head keeper at the Jardin des Plantes would inform Barye
when an animal was about to die so that the artist could call to study closely the bone structure of the animal he
could only normally sketch from behind bars.
By 1831 Barye left Fauconier and the same year his model of a "Tiger Devouring a Gavial" was well received by
the public as was his "Lion Crushing a Serpent" the following year. These two dramatic pieces splendidly depict the
combat of animals in the wild, a subject that was to appear frequently in Barye's sculpture.
The 1830's were a time of great success for Barye and the new monarch, Louis-Philippe, was an enthusiastic
patron of the arts and his son, the Duc d'Orleans, commissioned Barye to produce a group of five dramatic hunt
scenes, each one depicting on the great game animals, which Barye carried out between 1834 and 1838. These
unique pieces are now included in the collection of the Walters Art Gallery in Baltimore, Maryland, USA. Barye's
work was extremely popular with the affluent classes, particularly as many of his subjects featured 'the chase', a
strongly followed pastime.
Although Barye was celebrated by the public, his work was little appreciated by the art establishment of the time.
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Along with such romantics as Delacroix, Barye's work became completely closed out of the Salon by 1837, so in
1839 he opened his own studio and was able to produce bronzes for sale direct to the public. However, important
commissions still came to Barye through the mid-nineteenth century including a monumental Lion for the Tuileries
Gardens and "Roger Abducting Angelique on a Hippogriff" for the Duc de Montpensier.
With the change of establishment at the Salon after 1848, Barye resumed submitting work and in 1850 his
"Theseus Slaying the Centaur" was received with triumph. Five years later this piece won the grand medal of
sculpture at the Exposition Universelle. In 1854, Barye was appointed Professor of Zoological Drawing at the Jardin
des Plantes and pupils of Barye's during this period included Rodin and Emmanuel Fremiet.
As the father of the 'Animalier' movement, Barye spawned many imitators, yet, his unique style and variety of
subjects made his work highly sought after not only in France but also in America. Both during and shortly after
Barye's lifetime a number of large and important collections were formed in the USA, the most notable being the
aforementioned Walters Art Gallery collection. From humble beginnings as a metalworker, Barye reached the
heights of artistic development and success in a career spanning 56 years. Barye died in Paris in 1875 at the age
of 79.
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