Misplaced Pages

Gustave Deloye

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
19th century French sculptor
Gustave Deloye,
by Ignaz Eigner (1875)
Monument to Garibaldi [fr] in Nice

Jean-Baptiste Gustave Deloye (30 April 1838, Sedan - 17 February 1899, Paris) was a French sculptor and medallist in the Neo-Baroque style.

Biography

He was a student of François Jouffroy and Jean-Pierre Dantan at the École des beaux-arts de Paris. In 1862, he was awarded second place for sculpture in the Prix de Rome. He was a frequent exhibitor at the Salon and received several commissions for monuments from the French government.

Among his most outstanding works are the caryatids at the Château de Chenonceaux, the Château de La Boissière [fr] and the Château d'Aynac [fr]. His best known work is a monument to Giuseppe Garibaldi (1891), commissioned by the city of Nice, done from an original design by Antoine Étex.That same year, he contributed two bas-reliefs for a monument to Juan Santamaría, a national hero of Costa Rica, in Alajuela, created by his friend Aristide Croisy.

In 1892, he was named a Knight in the Legion of Honor. He also created numerous decorative works at public buildings in Vienna, Rome and St. Petersburg and smaller figures for the Meissen Porcelain factory. His statue of Mark the Evangelist on a winged lion is on display at the Musée d'Orsay.

He is buried at L'Étang-la-Ville.

References

  1. Œuvres de Deloye @ the Base Palissy.
  2. Notice du château d'Aynac Archived 2016-03-09 at the Wayback Machine sur patrimoines.midipyrenees.fr.
  3. Guillermo Brenes. Iconografía emblematica del héroe Juan Santamaría, Historia Crítica nº37, enero-abril 2008, Bogota; consultado el 06.03.2015
  4. Dossier @ the Base Léonore.
  5. Foto de la estatua de San Marcos, Statue Mania; consultado el 06.03.2015

Further reading

  • Guillaume Peigné, Dictionnaire des sculpteurs néo-baroques français (1870-1914), CTHS (2012) ISBN 978-2-7355-0780-1

External links

Categories: