Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux (1827-1875) d'après - Lot 395

Lot 395
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Estimation :
1500 - 2000 EUR
Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux (1827-1875) d'après - Lot 395
Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux (1827-1875) d'après Why Be Born a Slave Bust in plaster with black patina (traces of wear) H. 60 cm Pourquoi Naître Esclave is one of the most important works of Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux representing an oppressed black woman. Commissioned by the Prefect of the Seine in 1867, the model was executed in 1868 as a study for one of the figures in the Fountain of the Four Parts of the World, near the Luxembourg Gardens. Exhibited at the Salon of 1869 under the title of Négresse, the bust caused a great sensation. Théophile Gauthier described it thus in the Journal Officiel: "The Negress, with the rope that ties her arms to her back and crumples her breast, raises to the sky the only thing that a slave has of freedom, the look, a look of despair and silent reproach, a useless call for justification, a dull protest against the crushing of destiny. It is a piece of rare vigor where ethnographic accuracy is dramatized by a deep sense of pain." Carpeaux during his lifetime made several limited prints in bronze, terracotta, bisque and plaster of this model. After his death, his family also produced posthumous prints. Provenance: Private collection in Paris.
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