A large French parcel-gilt bronze group entitled 'Gloria Victis'
A large French parcel-gilt bronze group entitled 'Gloria Victis'

CAST FROM A MODEL BY MARIUS-JEAN-ANTONIN MERCIÉ, PARIS, CIRCA 1880

Details
A large French parcel-gilt bronze group entitled 'Gloria Victis'
Cast from a model by Marius-Jean-Antonin Mercié, Paris, Circa 1880
The naturalistically-cast base inscribed A. MERCIE and with foundry stamp F. BARBEDIENNE FONDEUR PARIS 15', and with Réduction Mécanique stamp
56in. (142.3cm.) high

Lot Essay

Marius-Jean-Antonin Mercié was a student at the French Academy of Rome when the Prussians invaded France in 1870. Shortly after the war had begun, the sculptor produced a group with a figure of Fame supporting a victorious soldier. When news reached Mercié in Rome that the French had surrendered, he decided to alter his group, replacing the victorious soldier with a defeated one, thereby transforming an allegory of Glory to the Victors into one of Glory to the Vanquished. The figure of the fallen soldier was thought to represent Henri Regnault, a fellow sculptor of Mercié who was killed on the last day of the war.

The full size plaster model of Gloria Victis was exhibited at the Salon of 1874, winning the Medaille d'Honneur and critical acclaim. It was then purchased by the city of Paris for the sum of twelve thousand francs, and then cast in bronze by Victor Thiébaut for eight thousand francs. This original full-size bronze is now placed in a central courtyard at the Hôtel de Ville. The plaster version was re-exhibited at the Exposition Universelle of 1878 alongside bronze reductions cast by Barbedienne. Mercié's modern sculpture had become an instant classic, even receiving an entry in the Nouveau Larousse Illustré. The group's success undoubtedly lay in the fact that it was admired not just on an aesthetic level, but on a patriotic level also, particularly in its commemoration of heroism in defeat. Critics also marvelled at the compositional daring of the group, balancing as it did two figures on the minimal support of one foot, and in doing so drawing on the antique Dancing Faun and on Giambologna's Mercury. In its turn, Gloria Victis was to be influential upon numerous later works, the most celebrated of which being Rodin's Call to Arms.

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