• Source: Bernard Seurre
    • Bernard-Gabriel Seurre or Seurre the Elder (11 July 1795 – 3 October 1867) was a French sculptor. His younger brother Charles Émile Seurre (1798–1858) was also a sculptor.


      Life


      Born in Paris, Bernard Seurre was a student of the sculptor Pierre Cartellier. In 1818 Bernard Seurre won the Prix de Rome for sculpture with a relief on the subject Chilonis imploring mercy for her husband Cleombrotus He then produced sculptures for the Arc de Triomphe between 1833 and 1836 and produced a design for a sculpture on top of it in 1833 (though this was never realized).
      He died in Paris.


      Works




      = Arc de triomphe

      =
      The Battle of Aboukir, bas-relief, stone, east façade (champs-Élysées side), above The Apotheosis of Napoleon I and The Triumph of 1810 by Jean-Pierre Cortot
      Entablature frieze, west façade (avenue de la Grande-Armée side), right half
      Entablature frieze, south façade (avenue Kléber side), left half
      Design for sculpture on top of the Arc de triomphe - allegory of France victorious (1833), drawing, Paris, musée d'Orsay


      = Other

      =
      Molière standing in meditation, over-life-size, bronze, Paris, Musée du Louvre
      Molière, bronze, Paris, 1844, fontaine Molière, junction of rue de Richelieu and la rue Molière
      Jean de La Fontaine, statue, marble, Paris, palais de l'Institut
      Modesty, statue, Paris, cimetière du Père-Lachaise, tomb of Pierre Cartellier, left side
      Portrait of Nicolas Béhuchet, admiral of France, died 1340 (vers 1838), bust, plaster, Versailles, châteaux de Versailles et de Trianon


      Sources



      (in French) Pierre Kjellberg, Le Nouveau guide des statues de Paris, La Bibliothèque des Arts, Paris, 1988.
      (in French) Emmanuel Schwartz, Les Sculptures de l'École des Beaux-Arts de Paris. Histoire, doctrines, catalogue, École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Paris, 2003.
      (in French) Charles Reutlinger, Portrait de Bernard Gabriel Seurre, photographs, Paris, musée d'Orsay


      References

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