Media Alert: David d’Angers: Making the Modern Monument

Plaster sculpted bust of man, with brow furrowed and head turned

Lauded by Victor Hugo as the Michelangelo of Paris, French sculptor Pierre-Jean David d’Angers (1788–1856) produced many of the most iconic portraits and ambitious public monuments of the Romantic era. An experimental writer, outspoken Republican, and teacher to some of the greatest sculptors of the nineteenth century, David d’Angers cultivated friendships with an array of contemporary artists, writers, scientists, and politicians, from Honoré de Balzac and Niccolò Paganini to Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Eugène Delacroix. This exhibition assembles some forty-five works by David on paper and in wax, terracotta, marble, bronze, and plaster, as well as rare nineteenth-century reproductions of his work in photographs and engravings. The depth and variety of David’s oeuvre will be well represented, beginning with his early prize-winning “tête d’expression” bust La Douleur (1811, Roberta J.M. Olson and Alexander B.V. Johnson) and concluding with some of the last medallions he made, such as his portrayal of French painter Rosa Bonheur (1854, private collection). Drawn largely from North American collections, many of these objects have never before been exhibited. David d’Angers: Making the Modern Monument will unite medals, portrait busts, bas-reliefs, and statuettes in order to highlight their shared themes of homage, celebrity, and the representation of history. Together, they reveal the artist’s quest to redefine the notion of a monument in a period marked by both intense historicism and the ever-accelerating rhythms of modernity.

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