Animalier

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Frans SnydersStill Life with a Wine Cooler
Eagle by Henri Alfred Jacquemart on the Paris Garnier Opera
A bronze sculpture of a partridge with gilt patination by Jules Moigniez, c. 1880

An animalier is an artist, mainly from the 19th century, who specializes in, or is known for, skill in the realistic portrayal of animals. "Animal painter" is the more general term for earlier artists. Although the work may be in any genre or format, the term is most often applied to sculptors and painters.

Animalier as a collective plural noun, or animalier bronzes, is also a term in antiques for small-scale sculptures of animals, of which large numbers were produced, often mass-produced, primarily in 19th-century France and to a lesser extent elsewhere in continental Europe.

Although many earlier examples can be found, animalier sculpture became more popular, and reputable, in early 19th-century Paris with the works of Antoine-Louis Barye (1795–1875), for whom the term was coined, derisively, by critics in 1831,[1][2] and of Émile-Coriolan Guillemin. By the mid-century, a taste for animal subjects was very widespread among all sections of the middle-classes.

In French, a parc animalier is a zoo.

Prominent animaliers

Painters

Sculptors

References

  1. ^ ""Animalier sculpture." ''The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art''. Oxford University Press, Inc., 2002. Answers.com 13 April 2008". Answers.com. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
  2. ^ "Dr. Arthur R. Metz and His Collection". Indiana.edu. Retrieved 23 August 2012.

External links