Drawing and chasing bronze. Jean-Louis Prieur (1732-1795)

from 15 October 2015 to 17 January 2016

The sculptor and chaser Jean-Louis Prieur was one of the most illustrious bronze smelters of the neoclassical period. He was born into a family of Parisian artisans specialised in the decorative arts: his father, Louis Prieur, was a master fan maker, and his uncle, Joseph de Saint-Germain, a master cabinetmaker. The latter’s son, Jean-Joseph de Saint-Germain (1719-1791), master founder in 1746, played a leading role in the very active world of the Parisian founders and chasers, and it may indeed have been in his workshop that Jean-Louis Prieur served his apprenticeship. Admitted to the Académie de Saint-Luc as a master sculptor in 1765, he became a master founder “in clay and sand” in 1769 but never exercised the profession of founder in the true sense. Like many of his counterparts at the head of large workshops, Jean-Louis Prieur was a “founder-chaser,” meaning that he did not have the equipment for founding pieces.

This exhibition features twenty-one drawings attributed to him from the Musée du MAD’ Department of Prints and Drawings and the Kraemer Collection. This selection includes models for bronzes, circa 1770, and others for engravings of ornamental supports and vases, circa 1783. They reflect the evolution in Jean-Louis Prieur’s career, who became an ornamental sculptor after his bankruptcy in 1778.

This ensemble is complemented by the exceptional loan of two drawings by the artist in the University of Warsaw Library (ill. 1) directly referring to works kept in the Musée Nissim de Camondo 1, and three etchings of vases in the Bibliothèque Nationale de France’s Department of Prints and Photography and the Bibliothèque du MAD. The “Allegory of Study” clock, circa 1770, a prestigious loan from the Musée du Louvre, is one of the rare bronzes signed by the artist.

Curator

• Sylvie LEGRAND-ROSSI, Head Curator, Musée Nissim de Camondo

With the generous support of Galerie Kraemer.

The Drawings of Models for Bronzes

Around 1770, Jean-Louis Prieur was undoubtedly one of the first professional draughtsmen. He produced drawings of models for bronzes so that they could be registered and protected. These pieces are represented symmetrically on either side of a central vertical axis. Executed in pen and black ink, sometimes over a graphite drawing, they were then heightened with sepia watercolour on a grey wash ground. None of the drawings are signed.

The fireplaces

Modèle de cheminée masqué en console, Paris, vers 1771-1772
Papier vergé ; plume, encre noire, lavis gris, aquarelle sépia
Inv. 8531
© MAD, Paris

In the 18th century, marble fireplaces decorated with gilt bronzes were specially commissioned luxury creations. The drawing of a fireplace disguised as a console table has been identified as corresponding to the description in the 1779 inventory of the “small apartments” in the Palais Bourbon, the stylish mansion built in 1771-1772 by Billard de Bellissard for Louis-Joseph de Bourbon, Prince of Condé. The round, domed drawing room had a fireplace “with a white marble table supported by bronze legs gilded with ground gold. The firedogs are linked to these supports, so that it can effectively serve as a table in summer by adding the rear panel” 2. The number “2” written in ink suggests that this drawing may have been destined to be shown to a buyer, in this case the Duke of Bourbon. The model for a four-legged console table with adjoining firedogs is also a disguised fireplace, and probably a variation of the preceding project 3.

The console tables

Projet de console, Paris, vers 1775
Papier vergé ; plume, encre noire, lavis gris, aquarelle sépia
Inv. 8529
© MAD, Paris

The console table’s decoration usually echoed that of the fireplace because they were often placed opposite one another. On the rim of the four-legged table there is a medallion with two interlaced Ls. The presence of the royal monogram would indicate that this model was destined for the king, for whom Jean-Louis Prieur had already worked: in 1775, he delivered the bronzes of Louis XVI’s coronation carriage, after drawings by Bélanger. The intersection of the crossstruts is decorated with an eagle cut in two in the middle. The four tapering, rectangular legs are surmounted by busts of women “in the antique style.” This exceptional model for a console table is reminiscent of the luxurious example in the Frick Collection, created in Turquin blue marble around 1780, whose bronzes are attributed to Pierre Gouthière 4. A second project shows a “d’entre-deux” console table with one fluted leg with a satyr’s mask, one of the artist’s recurrent motifs, with radiating garlands of fruit and bunches of grapes 5.

The lamps

Modèle de lustre, Paris, vers 1770
Papier vergé ; plume, encre noire, aquarelle sépia
Inv. 8520
© MAD, Paris

Children, chubby, pot-bellied and often laughing, are frequently represented on Jean-Louis Prieur’s models for candelabra, torch lamps, bras de lumière and chandeliers. The drawing of a wall lamp with two bras de lumière bears the inscription “N°Ier” (ill. 4). It may also have been destined to be shown to a client or marchand mercier (furniture supplier). Three candles rise from the arms in the form of a horn of plenty. The lamp’s body is formed by a term figure of a child bearing a basket of flowers on its head, from which garlands of beads are departing to the horns of plenty. The model is large: “23 inches high” and “14 inches wide” (62.2 x 37.8 cm). The model for a six-branched chandelier, on the other hand, has the rarer decoration of a military trophy 6. Formed by a lictor’s fasces surmounted by a plumed helmet crowned by an eagle, the chandelier’s stem is surrounded by four standards, above an oval medallion with a beaming sun. The dimensions are also indicated: “3 ½ feet high” (approx. 1.13 m).

Drawings of Models for Engravings

After his bankruptcy in 1778, Jean-Louis Prieur took refuge in the Enclos du Temple under the protection of the Count of Artois to escape his creditors and royal jurisdiction. His activity as an ornamental sculptor now predominated, as attested by the many collections of drawings and engravings now in existence 7 8. This also enabled him to compensate for his loss of clientele and the decline of his founder-chaser’s workshop.

The ornaments for parcloses

Montant d’ornements, Paris, avant 1784
Papier vergé; plume, encre noire, aquarelle sépia et bleue
Collection Kraemer
© MAD, Paris / Jean Tholance

Drawn by Prieur and engraved by Fay, seven Cahiers de sujets arabesques numbered X to XVI were published by Mondhare & Jean after 1784. In the 1770s and 80s, the arabesque genre then in vogue spawned numerous albums for use by artists as models. Depicting fanciful figures and naturalist ornamental motifs mirrored on either side of a vertical axis, these compositions were intended to be painted on panelling. Delicate and pleasant to the eye, they were ideal for intimate rooms such as the boudoir. Two parclose ornaments dating from around 1784 from the Kraemer Collection depict antique-inspired motifs such as smoking cassolettes and the imperial eagle, with plump children and garlands of flowers. Combined in numerous variations, these compositions in an easily recognisable style exude the joie de vivre so typical of Prieur’s work.

The Suites de Vases

Modèle de vase en bronze, Paris, vers 1780-1790
Papier vergé ; plume, encre noire, aquarelle sépia, crayon graphite
Inv. 3412
© MAD, Paris

In 1783, three Suites de Vases were published, drawn and engraved by the artist and dedicated to the Chevalier de Crussol, bailli (king’s administrative representative) of the Enclos du Temple. These prints have enabled us to identify two drawings of vases. The one decorated with caryatids (ill. 7), figures then fashionable inspired by the Kanephoros caryatids on the Erechtheion in Athens. is part of the 1ère Suite. The vase with satyrs’ head mascarons and bacchic decoration 9 was published in the second series. The model with handles in the form of satyresses 10 was probably engraved by Fay for the XIe Cahier de Vases, published by Jean after 1792. The four models with arabesque decoration largely depict the plump children so characteristic of Jean-Louis Prieur’s style 11. The engraving of the one with handles in the form of infant tritons is in the Ve Cahier de Vases, drawn by Prieur and engraved by Fay, published by Mondhare & Jean between 1784 and 1792.

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