artist
Aime Jules Dalou was one of the most prolific and successful monument makers in France during the last two decades of the nineteenth century. Dalou received his first commission for a public monument for the Royal Exchange in London having been forced into exile to England because of his left-wing political views. This commission was a major turning point in the artist's career. When he returned to Paris after the amnesty of 1879-80, only monuments celebrating the greatest men of ideals of his era could completely satisfy him. In Paris during the 1890s, a number of Dalou's monuments were erected and inaugurated to commemorate distinguished individuals. Each of these individuals was someone with whom Dalou felt a particular artistic, social, or political affinity.
Adrien A. Hebrard (c. 1865-1937), fondeur, devoted much of his life to promoting sculpture and the craft of bronze casting. He was especially committed to the preservation of works left uncast by artists at the time of their death. Without Hebrard's intervention much of the work of Jules Dalou would have remained unknown. Three years after Dalou's death, the Petit Palais acquired a great number of small terracotta and plaster models. Two years later, in 1907, Hebrard was given authorization to cast the works in bronze.
provenance
literature
Amélie Simier, Jules Dalou le sculpteur de la République, exh.
cat. Petit-Palais, Paris, 2013, p. 431, n. 354 (plaster model illustrated ; terra cotta study also pictured, p. 430 n. 353)
Maurice Dreyfous, Dalou: Sa Vie et son Oeuvre, ed. Henri Laurens, Paris: Librairie
Renouard, 1903, p. 242, 267
Camille Gronkowski, Catalogue Sommaire des Collections Municipales : Palais des Beaux-
Arts de la Ville de Paris, Paris : Imprimerie Crété, 1927, cat. no. 652, p. 306
(plaster model)
Henriette Caillaux, Dalou (1838-1902) : L’Homme—L’œuvre, Paris : Librairie
Delagrave, 1935, cat. no. 217, p. 149 (plaster model)
John M. Hunisak, The Sculptor Jules Dalou : Studies in His Style and Imagery, Garland
Publishing : 1977, p. 120-121, ill. 62 (plaster model)