- Paul Dubois
Paul Dubois (
July 18 1829 - 1905) was a significant French sculptor and painter.He was born at
Nogent-sur-Seine . He studiedlaw to please his family, and art to please himself, and finally adopted the latter, and placed himself in the atelier of Armand Toussaint (1806-1862), a former pupil of David d'Angers. After studying at theÉcole des Beaux-Arts , Dubois went toRome . His first contributions to theParis Salon (1860) werebust s of "The Countess de B" and "A Child". For his first exhibited statues, "The Infant St John the Baptist" and "Narcissus at the Bath " (1863), he was awarded a medal of the second class. The statue of the "Infant St John", which had been modelled inFlorence in 1860, was exhibited inParis inbronze , and was acquired by the French State for theMusée du Luxembourg . "A Florentine Singer of the Fifteenth Century" (depicted in doublet and hose playing alute ), for a time one of the most reproduced statuettes in Europe, was shown in 1865. A "Virgin and Child" appeared in theExposition Universelle (1867) ; "The Birth of Eve" was produced in 1873, and was followed by striking busts ofJean-Jacques Henner , Dr Parrot,Paul Baudry ,Louis Pasteur ,Charles Gounod andLéon Bonnat , [The bust of Bonnat was illustrated in "Harper's Weekly " 1890:34:341. (American Library Association, "A.L.A. Portrait Index: Index to Portraits Contained in Printed Books...")] remarkable alike for life, vivacity, likeness, refinement and subtle handling.The chief work of Paul Dubois was The Tomb of General Lamoricière in the Cathedral of Nantes, conceived in theRenaissance spirit, with allegorical figures and groups representing "Warlike Courage, Charity,Faith " and "Meditation ", as well asbas-relief s and enrichments; the two first-named works were separately exhibited in the Salon of 1877. The medallions represent "Wisdom ,Hope ,Justice ,Force ,Rhetoric ,Prudence " and "Religion ". The statue of the ConstableAnne de Montmorency was executed forChantilly , and that ofJoan of Arc (1889) for the town ofRheims . The Italian influence which characterized the earlier work of Dubois disappeared as his own individuality became clearly asserted.As a painter he restricted himself mainly to portraiture. "My Children" (1876) being probably his most noteworthy achievement.
His drawings and copies after the Old Masters are of peculiar excellence: they include "The Dead Christ" (after
Sebastian del Piombo ) and "Adam and Eve " (afterRaphael ). In 1873 Dubois was appointed keeper of the Musée du Luxembourg, at the time the repository of the national collection of modern art. He succeededJean-Baptiste Claude Eugène Guillaume as director of theÉcole des Beaux-Arts , 1878, andJean-Joseph Perraud as member of theAcadémie des Beaux-Arts . Twice at theParis Salon he obtained the medal of honour (1865 and 1876), and also at theExposition Universelle (1878) . He also won numerous other distinctions, and was appointed grand cross of the Legion of Honour. He was made a member of several European orders, and in 1895 was elected an honorary foreign academician of theRoyal Academy , London. He died in Paris in 1905.Notes
References
1911 "Please update as needed."
External links
* [http://www.insecula.com/contact/A005507.html Insecula (French language): index to pages on Dubois' works]
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