This description has been translated and may not be completely accurate. Click here to see the original
Large Bronze 19th century, 72 cm, Jean Jules SAMSON 1823/1902, The Roman dancer
Epoch: 19th century, Bronze with lost wax and on a bronze base, in excellent condition, noted a small hollow bump on the side of the tambourine, barely visible, see the last photo ...
Signed: J. Samson, 19th century artist referenced and listed
Subject: The Roman dancer
Dimensions: total height: 72 cm, width: 32 cm, depth: 25 cm, approximately 25 Kg
Biography:
Justin Chrysostome SANSON 1833 / 1910
Justin-Chrysostome Sanson born August 9, 1833 in Nemours and died November 1, 1910 in Paris is a French sculptor.
He is the main founder of the castle-museum of Nemours.
Winner of the Grand Prix de Rome for sculpture in 1861, he rubbed shoulders with many artists with whom he maintained friendships, including sculptors (such as Louis Breitel, Just Becquet, Jean-André Delorme, etc.), musicians (Jules Massenet), architects (Louis Boitte, Jean Herbault, etc.) and painters (Henri-Charles Daudin, Paul Baudouin, etc.).
Early life and training:
In 1852, Justin-Chrysostome Sanson was a student at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris in the studio of François Jouffroy. In 1861, he won the Grand Prix de Rome for his bas-relief Ulysses bringing Chryseis back to his father, and became a boarder at the Villa Medici for five years, completing his training surrounded by works of Antiquity.
Artistic career:
Between 1868 and 1883, he created sculptures for the decoration of Parisian monuments such as the Tuileries Palace, the City Hall, the Louvre Palace, the Opéra Garnier, and the Saint-François-Xavier Church. For the Palais de Justice in Amiens, he sculpted the figures of The Charity of Saint Martin, The Law, Justice, and The Law, etc.
The most awarded of his works is his Pieta, kept in the Saint-Jean-Baptiste Church in Nemours, whose bronze was awarded a medal at the 1869 Salon, and the marble at the 1878 Universal Exhibition in Paris.
Justin Sanson was named a knight in the National Order of the Legion of Honor by decree of July 26, 18762. He died on November 1, 1910 at his home in the 6th arrondissement of Paris.
In 1901, Justin-Chrysostome Sanson created the Association of the Society of Friends of the Old Castle with two other Nemours artists in order to save the castle of Nemours from ruin. After restoration, the museum opened its doors on October 18, 1903.
Sanson donated some of his works to the museum in 1901, and bequeathed his studio collection to it upon his death in 1910.
The Dancer of Saltarelle is this artist's flagship work. This bronze statue cast by Thiébaut, 168 cm high, exhibited at the Salon in 1866 and placed in the garden of Diane in Fontainebleau, reappeared in bronze reduction under the name of Roman Dancer in 1869.
Sanson also executed statues for the decoration of the Louvre, the Tuileries, the Opera, the Town Hall, the church of Saint François Xavier, for the courthouse of Amiens as well as a bronze pieta for the church of Nemours.
Source Bénézit and Dictionary of 19th Century Sculptors
Sold with Invoice and Certificate.
Bronze visible at our gallery in L’Isle sur la Sorgue (France), on weekends.
Free shipping for France.
And on estimate for abroad
A1704
Ref: ZZHUGP0JE6