"Sèvres Biscuit from the series of Great... - Lot 3 - Osenat

Lot 3
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Estimation :
3000 - 4000 EUR
Result with fees
Result : 3 750EUR
"Sèvres Biscuit from the series of Great... - Lot 3 - Osenat
"Sèvres Biscuit from the series of Great Men representing Charles de Secondat, Baron de La Brède and Montesquieu, seated, holding the Spirit of the Laws, on a square base bearing the intaglio inscription: MONTESQUIEU Modèle de Clodion. Marked Sèvres and AB 4 Jn dz for alexandre Brachard, 4 June 1812. Empire period, year 1812 . H. 37 cm, W. 23 cm. Splinter at the tip of the feather, the index finger of the right hand broken and missing, a splinter at the bottom of the dress. The Count of Angiviller, Director General of Buildings, began in 1776 to create a series of marble statues representing the Great Men of France. It is planned that they will adorn the Grand Gallery of the Palais du Louvre, destined to become the Museum. D'Angiviller entered into a relationship with Jean Baptiste Pierre, First Painter and future director of the Academy, and expressed to him in a letter dated 14 March 1776 his wish to entrust four sculptors of the Royal Academy with the creation of monumental statues to represent "" some man famous in the nation for his virtues, talents or genius "". D'Angiviller selects the Illustrious Men who are to be statues and Pierre proposes the sculptors. Twenty-seven statues of Great Men were made in the 18th century. The personalities selected are divided between philosophical writers, men of the Church and of State and military heroes and men of war. They were never installed in the Louvre Gallery and remained in reserve in the Salle des Antiques until the end of the Ancien Régime, before being sent for the most part to the Institute. From 1782 onwards, the Count of Angiviller decided to publish Grands Hommes in the form of Sèvres biscuits based on terracotta reductions provided by sculptors. He describes his project in a letter dated January 16, 1782 addressed to the director of the Régnier factory: "" I believe, Sir, that I have already spoken to you about my intention to have the statues of the Great Men executed in porcelain and in small pie
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