A French white marble group entitled 'Le Crepuscule'

BY EMILE-ANDRE BOISSEAU, CIRCA 1885

Details
A French white marble group entitled 'Le Crepuscule'
By Emile-Andre Boisseau, Circa 1885
Of a nymph holding up an oil-lamp above two putti sleeping beneath her folded wings, on an oval naturalistically-carved base inscribed E. Boisseau and with the title carved to the front
29½ in. (75 cm.) high

Lot Essay

Emile-André Boisseau was a regular exhibitor at the Salon from 1870, winning numerous prizes. The present work, Le Crépuscule (Twilight) was shown in marble at the Salon of 1883, where it was awarded the gold medal. In an illustrated article in the Gazette des Beaux-Arts in the same year, the critic H. Jouin described the group thus: "M. Boisseau a représenté le Crépuscule sous la forme d'un génie qui allume sa lampe nocturne pendant que les enfants sommeillent sous les ailes puissantes. L'artiste a donné un corps de femme au personnage qu'il voulait créerL: le regard et l'attitude générale ont quelque chose de maternel. Le Crépuscule est une composition sobre et gracieuse". Boisseau himself was inspired to pen the following poem about his own work: "Le silence se fait. Dans l'ombre/Quand l'étoile du berger fuit/la nature sous le ciel sombre/Doucement s'endort. c'est la Nuit".

Another marble by Boisseau, entitled Amour Maternel, was sold in these rooms, 31 October 1996, lot 363.

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