Alexandre Falguiere (1831 - 1900). Moorish Woman. Ex Hirschhorn Museum


Alexandre Falguiere (1831 - 1900).  Moorish Woman.  Ex Hirschhorn Museum

When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.


Buy Now

Alexandre Falguiere (1831 - 1900). Moorish Woman. Ex Hirschhorn Museum :
$1750.00


19th century impressionist painting by Alexandre Falguiere. From the personal collection of Joseph H Hirshhorn Collection, deaccessioned by the Hirshhorn Museum. Great provenance on this highly collectible artist. Dimensions are 8” x 4 ¾” and framed the dimensions are 12” x 9”. Excellent original condition. Signed lower right. Moorish woman seated on floor .

Jean Alexandre Joseph Falguière (also given as Jean-Joseph-Alexandre Falguière, or in short Alexandre Falguière) (7 September 1831, - 20 April 1900, Paris) was a French sculptor and painter.

He was born in Toulouse. A pupil of the École des Beaux-Arts, he won the Prix de Rome in 1859; he was awarded the medal of honor at the Paris Salon in 1868 and was appointed officer of the Legion d’honneur in 1878.

His first bronze statue of importance was Le Vainqueur au Combat de Coqs (Victor of the Cockfight) (1864), and Tarcisus the Christian boy martyr followed in 1867; both were exhibited in the Luxembourg Museum and are now in the Musée d\'Orsay. His more important monuments are those to Admiral Courbet (1890) at Abbeville and the famous Joan of Arc. He sculpted The Dancer, based on Cléo de Mérode which today is also in the Musée d\'Orsay.

His Triumph of the Republic (1881-1886), a vast quadriga for the Arc de Triomphe, Paris, is perhaps more amazingly full of life than others of his works, all of which reveal this quality of vitality in superlative degree.

To these works should be added his monuments to Cardinal Lavigerie and to General de La Fayette (in Washington, DC), and his statues of Alphonse de Lamartine (1876) and St Vincent de Paul (1879), as well as the Honoré de Balzac, which he executed for the Société des gens de lettres on their rejection of that by Auguste Rodin; and the busts of Carolus-Duran and Ernest Alexandre Honoré Coquelin (1896).

Falguière was a painter as well as a sculptor. He displays a fine sense of colour and tone, added to the qualities of life and vigor that he instills into his plastic work. His Wrestlers (1875) and Fan and Dagger (1882; a defiant Spanish woman) were in the Luxembourg, and other pictures of importance are The Beheading of St John the Baptist (1877), The Sphinx (1883), Acis and Galatea (1885), Old Woman and Child (1886) and In the Bull Slaughter-House.

He became a member of the Institut de France (Académie des Beaux-Arts) in 1882.

Falguière died in Paris in 1900.


Alexandre Falguiere (1831 - 1900). Moorish Woman. Ex Hirschhorn Museum :
$1750.00

Buy Now