A charming early 19th Century pair of bookends modelled as cats reaching down to snails exhibiting excellent detail, raised on a potoro marble bases and signed Hip Moreau
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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Height: 15.5 cm
Condition: Excellent Condition
Circa: 1920
Materials: Bronze
SKU: 8840
ABOUT
Hippolyte Moreau
Hippolyte is the second son of the sculptor Jean-Baptiste Moreau and started working in his fathers studio.
With his two brothers Mathurin and Auguste, he settled in Paris and was taught by François Jouffroy at the Ecole des Beaux Arts .
From 1863 to 1914 , he exhibited at the Salon des artistes français where he produced decorative objects most often inspired by the 18th century. He won a medal at the Universal Exhibition in 1878and another at the 1900 Universal Exhibition .
He mainly produces works of medium size and decorative or usual objects: vases, statuettes, paper-cutters , bronze , tin or regulated pockets.
He is the sculptor of the statue of Alexis Claude Clairaut (1880) on one of the façades of the Paris City Hall , rue de Lobau .
Most of his works are preserved in the Dijon Museum of Fine Arts .
The Moreau family sculptor dynasty begins with Jean Baptiste Moreau, who was born in Dijon, France at the end of the 18th century. Jean Baptiste had three sons who followed in his footsteps, they were Auguste, Mathurin and Hyppolyte-François. The legacy continued with Auguste’s sons, Louis Auguste and Hyppolyte Francois. Members of the Moreau family often studied at the famous École des Beaux-Arts in Paris.