Bust Of Mary - Louise Brongniart , Jean - Antoine Houdon (1741-1828) - Marble

Bust Of Mary - Louise Brongniart , Jean - Antoine Houdon (1741-1828) - Marble
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Bust in white Carrara marble , representing a bust of a young girl , "Marie-Louise Brongniart" , after the sculptor Jean-Antoine Houdon .
Through this bust , Houdon demonstrates his marvelous ability to transcribe without sentimentality the freshness of early childhood , of which Louise retains the curves . Thanks to the rendering of the eyes , Houdon gives this thoughtful look that children sometimes take on .
Louise and Alexandre are the children of Alexandre - Théodore Brongniart (1739-1813) , famous architect of the Paris Stock Exchange (Palais Brongniart) .
Bust signed "HOUDON" on the back .
Signature of the publisher "Gherardi" .
Old marble , second half of the 19th century .
Very good state of conservation .

Height : 48 cm

Busts of children , very rare in the 17th century and in the first half of the 18th century , became more and more numerous from the years 1750-1760 . This phenomenon reflects a change in mentality with regard to young age , which is reflected in the publication of "l' Emile" by Jean-Jacques Rousseau in 1762 .
It is also explained by the extension of the sculpted portrait to wider layers of society , but also by the development of "Heads of studies", usually more or less idealized portraits .

Houdon showed an interest in child portraits very early on , as early as his training period in Italy .
He sent a child's head in marble to his first Salon in 1769 .
If it were necessary to prove that one can be an artist of genius by leading a perfectly orderly existence , by fiercely defending one's material interests and by manifesting an opportunism tempered with indifference towards the political events of one's time , the life of Jean Antoine Houdon would suffice to prove it .

The fact that his father held the modest job of janitor at the Royal School for Protected Students undoubtedly facilitated his beginnings : a pupil of the Royal Academy before he was fifteen , a resident of the School for Protected Students (1761 -1764) , then from the French Academy in Rome (1764-1768) , approved at the Royal Academy in 1769 , he was received as a member of the latter in 1777 , on presentation of his Morpheus (Louvre) .

If , in 1793 , he was among the first to spontaneously renounce his title and his academic privileges , he was elected a member of the new Institute in 1795 , and successfully presented his candidacy for the order of the Legion of Honor in 1803 .
Neither his two trips to Germany (1771 and 1773) , nor his trip to the United States (1785) , nor his marriage (1786) , nor even the revolutionary turmoil disturbed his creative activity , the most visible manifestation of which was the regularity with which he exhibited at the Salons : from 1769 to 1795 , he presented a fairly large number of sculptures every two years .

Subsequently , his shipments , which were less considerable , were also less regular and ceased after 1814 .

Ref: 2HI1JRSJ6G

Style Second Empire style, Napoleon III style (Marble and Stone Sculptures of Second Empire style, Napoleon III style Style)
Period 19th century (Marble and Stone Sculptures 19th century)
Country of origin France
Artist Jean - Antoine Houdon
Height (cm) 48 cm
Materials Marble
Shipping Time Ready to ship in 2-3 Business Days
Location 93400, Saint-Ouen-sur-Seine, France
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