“Éléphant” bronze by Waldmann

Majestic early 20th Century French animalier bronze study of an elephant standing on a rocky landscape with excellent autumnal surface colours and very fine hand finished detail, signed O Waldmann

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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Height:                                        33 cm


Condition:                                  Excellent Original Condition


Circa:                                            1915


Materials:                                   Bronze


SKU:                                               7682


DESCRIPTION

Waldmann Bronze

Waldmann Bronze – Oscar Waldmann (Swiss 1856-1937) Oscar Waldmann received an honorable mention at the Exposition Universelle of 1900 for his animal sculptures — extremely popular due to their realistic portrayal -Aclaimed by other exhibiting sculptors, including Gardet and Vibert, and by the viewing public A cast of the present bronze was exhibited also in this exhibition of 1900. The artist lived and had a studio in Paris at 80 Avenue de Maine.In the 1920s he taught the African American sculptress Nancy Elizabeth Prophet at the Ecole des Beaux -Arts and also Katherine Elizabeth Wallis of Santa Cruz California. In 1924 he exhibited a \sculpture at the Olympic games.Waldmann was a regular exhibitor at the Royal Academy in London and at many exhibitions throughout Europe. His sculptures are highly prized among animalier collectors.

Animalier

Defined as sculptors of figurative animal subjects the Animalier school of artists became popular in the early 1800’s and the origin of a wonderful selection of the finest bronzes of both the 19th and 20th Centuries. In the Paris Salon of 1831 when Antoine Louis Barye exhibited his first animal sculpture, one zealous French art critic dubbed him an Animalier: maker of animals, the species deprived of human nobility. This was intended as a criticism and not a flattering title. This perception changed in the 1830’s when the new monarch, King Louis-Philippe gave several public commissions to Barye. The King’s son, the Duc d’Orleans, also became Barye’s patron and by the middle of the 19th Century any artist was proud to be known as an Animalier.

Although many earlier examples can be found, animalier sculpture became more popular, and reputable, in early 19th century Pariswith the works of Antoine-Louis Barye (1795–1875) for whom the term was coined and who became the ‘Father of the Animaliers School’ and Pierre Jules Mêne considered the finest realist sculptor of the era. By the mid-century, a taste for animal subjects was very widespread among all sections of society.

To view our selection of animalier bronzes like this Waldmann bronze please click here.

 

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