Gaston-Auguste Schweitzer | |
---|---|
Born | 1 September 1879 Montreuil-sous-Bois |
Died | 15 July 1962 Paris |
Resting place | Père Lachaise cemetery |
Nationality | French |
Occupation | Sculptor |
Gaston-Auguste Schweitzer (born in Montreuil-sous-Bois on 1 September 1879; died in Paris in 1962) was a French sculptor.
His father was from Alsace. He studied at the Paris École des Beaux-Arts under Alexandre Falguière, Antonin Mercié, Paul Auban and Victor Peter. He started exhibiting at the Salon des artistes français in 1903 and in 1908 was awarded a salon medal for the work entitled "L'Aveugle". He gave this work to Pontivy and it stands in the town's square Langlais. Called up in the 1914–1918 war, he developed lung problems and was posted to Pontivy to recuperate and developed an affection for the village and spent much of his life thereafter gravitating between studios in Paris and Pontivy. He was commissioned to work on several war memorials in the Pontivy area, namely those at Bubry, Pontivy, Noyal-Pontivy, Guémené-sur-Scorff, Silfiac, Naizin, Cléguérec and Priziac. He also worked on the monument dedicated to the painter Léon Lhermitte at Mont-Saint-Père in the Aisne. He died on 15 July 1962 and is buried in the Père Lachaise cemetery. Below are further details of Schweitzer's main works [1] [2]
This monument to Fernand de Langle de Cary was erected in 1938 in Pont-Scorff. Schweitzer executed a medallion depicting de Langle de Cary for the monument. [2] [3]
This iconic Schweitzer bronze, a study of a blind man tentatively feeling his way forward, can be seen in Pontivy's Jardin de la Roseraie in the rue d'Iéna. [2]
In 1908, Schweitzer was commissioned to supply sculptural decoration for the police building in Paris' rue des Orteaux. He executed a coat of arms with "Ville de Paris" inscribed beneath it. [2]
Schweitzer's first sale of an individual piece. This plaster group was purchased by the Ministère des Beaux-Arts for the sum of 3,000 francs. [2]
This work was exhibited at the Salon des Artistes français in 1913, a forerunner of Schweitzer's prolific output of studies of people in the French markets ("Halles") [2]
Between 1912 and 1962, Schweitzer created many small works in plaster depicting the different people one might see at a French market. These were known as the "petit peuple des Halles". [4] [5] [6]
The war memorial in the rue Jean Moulin dates to 1919–1922 and Schweitzer executed three bronze bas-reliefs which are attached to the granite pedestal. The names of 547 men from Pontivy, all killed in the two World Wars and the conflicts in Algeria and Indochina, are listed on two panels with a bas-relief under each panel depicting the body of a dead soldier, these placed on either side of a central bas-relief which depicts a woman deep in prayer. [7] [8]
This memorial dates to 1923. [9]
This monument has a bronze by Gaston-Auguste Schweitzer depicting a soldier throwing a grenade. [10] [11]
For this monument Schweitzer created a bronze relief depicting a group of soldiers and a sailor in action. At the top is a gallic cockerel perched on a German helmet. At Bubry there is also a statue in memory of Franchet d'Esperey by Schweitzer. [12] [13]
The Naizin war memorial was erected on 15 April 1923 and Schweitzer's relief depicts a wounded soldier and his mother who wears a Naizin bonnet. The memorial has inscriptions in French and in Breton. That in Breton reads
"Parréz nain d'he bugalé marù aveit er vro 1914-1918"
The dead of the Second World War are also remembered. [14]
For this monument Schweitzer depicted a woman showing a young boy the names of those who had lain down their lives for France. The woman wears the dress of a nun ("moniale") [2] [15]
For this monument Schweitzer executed a relief showing a mother and child laying flowers on the grave of a French soldier. [16]
For this war memorial Schweitzer depicts a soldier.
For this war memorial Schweitzer's sculpture depicts a woman holding a wounded soldier. [17] [18]
In 1928 Schweitzer was chosen to carry out sculptural work for the memorial to Léon Lhermitte in Mont-Saint-Père. He executed a bust of the painter and at the foot of the pedestal on which this bust was set, he created a sculpture based on Lhermitte's painting "La paye des moissonneurs". [2] [19]
Guémené-sur-Scorff is a commune in the Morbihan department in Brittany in north-western France.
Pontivy is a commune in the Morbihan department in Brittany in north-western France. It lies at the confluence of the river Blavet and the Canal de Nantes à Brest.
Cléguérec is a commune in the Morbihan department of Brittany in north-western France.
Noyal-Pontivy is a commune in the Morbihan department of Brittany in north-western France.
Pont-Scorff is a commune in the Morbihan department of Brittany in north-western France.
Émile Jean Armel-Beaufils was a French sculptor born in Rennes in 1882 and who died in Saint-Briac in 1952.
Edgar Boutry (1857–1938) was a French sculptor who executed several public statues and monuments and worked on several Monuments aux Morts. He also ran the Écoles académiques lilloises.
Raymond Delamarre (1890–1986) was a French sculptor and medalist. He played a major role in the Art Déco movement. While his ecclesiastical work showed the influence of Catholicism, he was personally agnostic. His art, especially his war memorials, was also influenced by his firsthand experiences of the horrors of the First World War.
Claude Grange was a French sculptor, born in Vienne on 23 September 1883 and who died in Paris on 22 September 1971.
Pierre-Marie Poisson was born in Niort on 19 November 1876 and died in Paris on 11 January 1953. He was a French sculptor and medallist.
Marcel Gaumont was a French sculptor born on 27 January 1880 in Tours. He died in Paris on 20 November 1962.
Georges Saupique was a French sculptor born on 17 May 1889 in Paris. He died in Paris on 8 May 1961.
Jean-Marie Baumel was a French sculptor born in Marseille on 2 November 1912 and who died in Neuilly/Eure on 2 June 1978.
Louis Henri Nicot was a French sculptor.
Pierre Lenoir was a French sculptor.
André-César Vermare was a French sculptor, born in Lyon in 1869.
The canton of Gourin is an administrative division of the Morbihan department, northwestern France. Its borders were modified at the French canton reorganisation which came into effect in March 2015. Its seat is in Gourin.