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The original plaster was restored in 1917 and is displayed at the Musée d'Orsay in Paris. [8] A series of plaster casts illustrating the development of the work is on view at the Musée Rodin in Meudon. Also in 1917, a model was used to make the original three bronze casts: The Musée Rodin, Paris. [10] The Rodin Museum, Philadelphia, United ...
Anne Crawford Acheson CBE FRBC [1] (5 August 1882 – 13 March 1962) was a British-Irish sculptor. She and Elinor Hallé invented plaster casts for soldier's broken limbs. . Acheson exhibited at the Royal Academy and internat
He designed a statue of the engineer Germain Sommeiller of Saint-Jeoire, with the plaster model displayed at the 1880 Paris Salon. [24] Becquet also presented a sculpture titled "Faun Playing with a Panther" (French: Faune jouant avec une panthère) at the Paris Salon of 1880 and the Tours Fine Arts Exhibition of 1881. Inscribed on the artwork ...
UNESCO Reclining Figure 1957–58 is a sculpture by Henry Moore.It was made in a series of scales, from a small plaster maquette, through a half-size working model made in plaster and cast in bronze (LH 415), to a full-size version carved in Roman travertine marble in 1957–1958 (LH 416). [1]
The simple geometric shape was influenced by her contact with European Constructivist artists, and has been compared to an abstracted standing figure or standing stone. The plaster sculpture remained in Paris until it was return to Hepworth in 1961. It is now held by the artist's estate at the Barbara Hepworth Museum in St Ives, Cornwall.
Chalkware is an American term for popular figurines either made of moulded plaster of Paris (usually) or sculpted gypsum, and painted, typically with oils or watercolors.
For a time in the early 1940s almost no works of Chiparus were sold but he continued sculpting for his own pleasure, depicting animals in the Art Deco style. At the 1942 Paris Salon, the plaster sculptures “Polar Bear” and “American Bison” were exhibited and in 1943 he showed a marble “Polar Bear” and plaster “Pelican”.
Elie Nadelman, Standing Nude, c. 1908, gilded bronze, Metropolitan Museum of Art Nadelman was born into a Jewish family in Warsaw in 1882. [1] He studied briefly in Warsaw and then visited Munich in 1902 where he became interested in Classical antiquities at the Glyptothek.