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Walking Jaguar No.2 ('Jaguar qui marche No 2')

Statuette
1840 (modelled)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This statuette was modelled by Antoine Louis Barye (1795-1875) as a pair to a Jaguar Standing. More than a decade later he modelled a slightly different pair, also of a jaguar walking paired with a jaguar standing but this time with their ears set back and on a rocky base.

Barye exhibited his first animal sculpture in the Paris Salon of 1831 when he was dubbed an 'Animalier', a maker of animals. Initially applied with derogatory overtones, this term became widely used for sculptors - of whom Barye was first and foremost - who specialised in this genre. He was referred to as the 'Michelangelo of the Menagerie' by the contemporaneous art critic Théophile Gautier.

Barye studied animals closely. He attended dissections of animals at the Museum of Natural History in Paris, where he served as the Master of Zoological Drawing from 1854 until his death. But he was also intensely interested in what lay underneath the physical appearance of animals - their inner vitality - and in this sense was in tune with his romantic contemporaries, for whom exotic or wild beasts held a particular fascination.

Although he obtained public commissions and enjoyed the patronage of the Dukes of Orleans, Luynes, Montpensier, and Nemours, Barye specialised in the relatively large-scale production small-scale animal sculptures. The expanding commercial market of the middle class helped ensure that his and other animalier sculptures gained in popularity through the latter half of the 19th century.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleWalking Jaguar No.2 ('Jaguar qui marche No 2')
Materials and techniques
bronze
Brief description
Walking Jaguar, Bronze, by A-L. Barye, French 1840
Physical description
Bronze statuette of a walking jaguar. A pacing jaguar. It is signed on the base 'Barye'. A label underneath the base is inscribed '73. Lioness 8.5 x 4' Barye. No stamp.
Dimensions
  • Including bronze base height: 10.32cm
  • Width: 7.5cm
  • Length: 22.3cm
  • Weight: 1.74kg
Marks and inscriptions
BARYE (on bronze base)
Credit line
Given by Dr Neville Goodman, C.B.
Object history
Given by Dr Neville Goodman, C.B.
Subject depicted
Summary
This statuette was modelled by Antoine Louis Barye (1795-1875) as a pair to a Jaguar Standing. More than a decade later he modelled a slightly different pair, also of a jaguar walking paired with a jaguar standing but this time with their ears set back and on a rocky base.

Barye exhibited his first animal sculpture in the Paris Salon of 1831 when he was dubbed an 'Animalier', a maker of animals. Initially applied with derogatory overtones, this term became widely used for sculptors - of whom Barye was first and foremost - who specialised in this genre. He was referred to as the 'Michelangelo of the Menagerie' by the contemporaneous art critic Théophile Gautier.

Barye studied animals closely. He attended dissections of animals at the Museum of Natural History in Paris, where he served as the Master of Zoological Drawing from 1854 until his death. But he was also intensely interested in what lay underneath the physical appearance of animals - their inner vitality - and in this sense was in tune with his romantic contemporaries, for whom exotic or wild beasts held a particular fascination.

Although he obtained public commissions and enjoyed the patronage of the Dukes of Orleans, Luynes, Montpensier, and Nemours, Barye specialised in the relatively large-scale production small-scale animal sculptures. The expanding commercial market of the middle class helped ensure that his and other animalier sculptures gained in popularity through the latter half of the 19th century.
Bibliographic references
  • Poletti, Michel and Richarme, Alain. Barye : Catalogue Raisonné des Sculptures Paris (Gallimard) 2000. Cat. no A90
  • Pivar, Stuart, The Barye Bronzes, A Catalogue Raisonné Woodbridge (The Antique Collectors Club), 1974, p.41, no A77
  • Horswell, Jane, Bronze Sculpture of 'Les Animaliers' Reference and Price Guide, Suffolk (The Antique Collectors Club), 1971, p.80
Collection
Accession number
A.24-1971

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Record createdJune 24, 2009
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