CHAPU, Henri - b. 1833 Le Mée-sur-Seine, d. 1891 Paris - WGA

CHAPU, Henri

(b. 1833 Le Mée-sur-Seine, d. 1891 Paris)

French sculptor. His father, a coachman, sent him to the Petite École (École Gratuite de Dessin), Paris, to have him trained as a tapestry-maker. In 1849 his successes led him to the École des Beaux-Arts, Paris, where he became a pupil of James Pradier, François Duret and Léon Cogniet. In 1855 he won the Prix de Rome for sculpture with the relief Cleobis and Biton (plaster, untraced; sketch model, Le Mée-sur-Seine, Musée Henri Chapu); he completed his education at the Académie de France in Rome, remaining there until 1861. During this time he lived as a virtual recluse, his only friend being the painter Léon Bonnat.

The bas-relief Christ with Angels (plaster, 1857; Le Mée-sur-Seine, Musée Henri Chapu), which was the first of the works he was required to send for judgement at the École des Beaux-Arts, was strongly criticized by Duret; it now appears to be one of the most sensitive sculptures of a classicizing artist, whose other Roman works included a copy of the antique Spinario (marble, 1858; Paris, École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts) and the much-exhibited statue of Mercury Inventing the Caduceus (marble, 1862-3; Paris, Musée d’Orsay).

His statues Mercury of 1862 and Jeanne d’Arc of 1870 (in which she was represented as a peasant girl) were his first big successes, and led to many commissions thereafter. He is also known for his medals, and led the French revival in the medal as an artistic form.

Alexandre Dumas Père
Alexandre Dumas Père by

Alexandre Dumas Père

Alexandre Dumas p�re (1802-1870) was the French author of many plays, popular romances, and historical novels. He excelled at both the dramatic genre and the romantic novel. His works involve adventuresome plots, which depict the heroic triumph of human strength and endurance. He wrote The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo. His illegitimate son Alexandre Dumas (1824-1895), called Dumas fils, was also a dramatist and novelist. He is best known for his play La Dame aux cam�lias (1848), the basis of Giuseppe Verdi’s opera La Traviata and later of several films titled Camille.

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