Antoine Étex

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Antoine Étex (March 20, 1808 ParisTemplate:SndJuly 14, 1888 Chaville) was a French sculptor, painter and architect.

Biography

He first exhibited in the Paris Salon of 1833, his work including a reproduction in marble of his Death of Hyacinthus, and the plaster cast of his Cain and His Race Cursed By God. Adolphe Thiers, who was at this time minister of public works, now commissioned him to execute the two groups of Peace and War, flanking the arch on the east facade of the Arc de Triomphe. This last, which established his reputation, he reproduced in marble in the Paris Salon of 1839.<ref name="EB1911">{{#if: |

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The French capital contains numerous examples of the sculptural works of Étex, which included mythological and religious subjects besides a great number of portraits.<ref name="EB1911"/> Among the best known of his architectural productions is Étex's tomb of Théodore Géricault in Père Lachaise Cemetery, which includes a bronze figure of the painter, and a low-relief version the painter's controversial Raft of the Medusa on a front panel.Template:Citation needed

Étex's paintings include the subjects of Eurydice and the martyrdom of Saint Sebastian, and he also wrote a number of essays on subjects connected with the arts. The last year of his life was spent at Nice, and he died at Chaville, Seine-et-Oise in 1888.<ref name="EB1911"/> He was buried in the Cimetière du Montparnasse in Paris.

Works

References

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  • PE Mangeant, Antoine Étex, peintre, sculpteur et architecte, 1808-1888 (Paris, 1894).

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