Émile Gilliéron
Swiss artist and archaeological draughtsman (1850–1924) / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Louis Émile Emmanuel Gilliéron (1850–1924), often known as Émile Gilliéron père to distinguish him from his son, was a Swiss artist and archaeological draughtsman best known for his reconstructions of Mycenaean and Minoan artefacts from the Bronze Age. From 1877 until his death, he worked with archaeologists such as Heinrich Schliemann, Arthur Evans and Georg Karo, drawing and restoring ancient objects from sites such as the Acropolis of Athens, Mycenae, Tiryns and Knossos. Well-known discoveries reconstructed by Gilliéron include the "Harvester Vase", the "Priest-King Fresco" and the "Bull-Leaping Fresco".
Émile Gilliéron père | |
---|---|
Born | Louis Émile Emmanuel Gilliéron (1850-10-24)October 24, 1850 Villeneuve, Switzerland |
Died | October 13, 1924(1924-10-13) (aged 73) Athens, Greece |
Education | Kunstakademie, Munich École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Paris |
Known for | Archaeological reconstructions, especially of frescoes from Knossos and Tiryns |
Spouse |
Joséphine Zoecchi (m. 1884) |
Children | Émile Gilliéron fils |
Patron(s) | German Archaeological Institute at Athens Heinrich Schliemann Arthur Evans |
From 1894, Gilliéron maintained a business producing replicas of archaeological finds, particularly metal vessels, which were sold to museums and collectors across Europe and North America. This enterprise grew particularly successful after Gilliéron introduced his son, also named Émile, into the business around 1909. The Gilliérons' work has been credited as a major influence on the public and academic perception of Greek antiquity, particularly Minoan civilisation, and with disseminating the influence of ancient cultures to modernist writers, artists and intellectuals such as James Joyce, Sigmund Freud and Pablo Picasso.
Many of Gilliéron's restorations were made from highly fragmentary evidence, and he often made bold, imaginative decisions in reconstructing what he believed to be the original material. In several cases, his hypotheses have been challenged or overturned by more recent study. Gilliéron frequently muddied the distinction between his own restorations and the original material, and was criticised in his day for overshadowing ancient material with his own creations. He was also likely involved in the illegal export of forged antiquities from Greece, and has been accused of direct involvement in the manufacture of faked objects.