- Jacques-Edme Dumont
Jacques-Edme Dumont (b.
Paris , April 10, 1761, d. Paris, Feb 21, 1844) was a French sculptor.Dumont came from a large dynasty of sculptors that included his grandfather
Pierre Dumont and childrenAugustin-Alexandre Dumont andJeanne Louise Dumont Farrenc . He was a pupil ofAugustin Pajou , and in1788 he won thePrix de Rome . From 1788 to 1793, he lived in Italy, after which he returned to his native France, in the hope a commission from theNational Convention during theFrench Revolution . However he secured no such commission, and began producing small statuettes and medallions for sale. Later, he received commissions for statues ofLouis Henri, Duke of Bourbon ,François Séverin Marceau-Desgraviers , andJean-Baptiste Colbert . During theBourbon Restoration , Dumont made a monument toGuillaume-Chrétien de Lamoignon de Malesherbes (1819) and a statue of French generalCharles Pichegru , which has since been destroyed. [cite book | last = Levey | first = Michael | title = Painting and Sculpture in France 1700-1789 | publisher =Yale University Press | date = 1995 | location = New Haven | pages = 235 | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=05qiZ2W9KFMC | isbn = 0-300-06494-2]Dumont was also a great sculptor of portraits, and notable examples of his work include a bust of his mother Marie-Françoise Berthault, and
Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma and wife of Napoleon (1810).References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.