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Paul Dubois (sculptor)
French sculptor and painter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Paul Dubois (French pronunciation: [pɔl dybwa]; 18 July 1829 – 23 May 1905, also known by Dubois-Pigalle) was a French sculptor and painter from Nogent-sur-Seine. His works were mainly sculptures and statues, and he was also a portrait painter.
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Early life
Paul Dubois was born on the 18 July 1829 in Nogent-sur-Seine, France. He began studying law to please his father who practiced as a notary, but gave this up in order to train as a sculptor; his enthusiasm for this possibly fanned by the admiration he had for the work of his great-uncle Jean-Baptiste Pigalle.[1] When making his debut at the Paris Salon in 1857 he did so under the name Dubois-Pigalle.[2]
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Career
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In 1858 he entered the atelier of Armand Toussaint at the École Nationale des Beaux-Arts. The following year he travelled to Rome, studying and copying the many great sculptures and mixed with the likes of Henri Chapu, Alexandre Falguière and Georges Bizet. As an artist he did not have to struggle with financial problems as his family supported all his studies.[3] He stayed in Rome for 4 years and whilst in Rome he executed the works Saint Jean-Baptiste and Narcisse and, in 1863, was awarded "une médaille de 2° classe" by the Paris Salon for work sent to Paris from Rome. When he returned to France he completed the study of a young troubadour, Chanteur florentin du XVe siècle, a work which was to bring him such popular success.[4][5]
In 1865 and 1876, he was awarded a médaille d'honneur at the Salon des beaux-arts. In June 1867 he was named Chevalier (Knight) of the Légion d'honneur; in July 1874 he was named Officer of the Légion d'honneur; in July 1886 he was promoted to Commander of the Légion d'honneur; and in 1889 he was decorated with the Grand Croix (Grand Cross) of the Légion d'honneur.[6]
His success was not limited to sculpture and as a painter he was in much demand for portraits and after 1870 he gave as much time and effort to his painting as to his sculpture. He also taught at the Académie Julian.[7] Dubois died from pneumonia in 1905.[8]
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Main works
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Le musée Camille Claudel (ex Dubois-Boucher)
This museum was established by Dubois and Alfred Boucher and holds information relating to Dubois.[39][40][41]
Gallery of images
- Bust in marble of the painter Alexandre Cabanel
- Ève naissante, Petit Palais, Paris
- Narcissus (1866), by Paul Dubois. On the north façade of the Cour Carrée in the Louvre Palace, Paris.
- Military Courage reproduction, Mount Vernon, Baltimore
- Equestrian statue of Anne de Montmorency in the Château de Chantilly
- Photograph of Dubois' wax maquette of Le Souvenir submitted to the Salon des artistes français in 1899. The work mourns the loss of Alsace and Lorraine following the 1870 war with Prussia.
- The monument/cenotaph to General de La Moricière in Nantes Cathedral
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References
External links
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