Signed: M. Le Verrier, artist of the 20th Art Deco, referenced and highly rated,
Subject: "Pierrot"
Dimensions: height: 45 cm, width: 21 cm, depth: 12 cm
Biography:
Max Le VERRIER 1891 / 1919
Max Le Verrier was born on January 29, 1891 in Neuilly-sur-Seine. Le Verrier died on June 6, 1973 in Paris. Louis Octave Maxime Le Verrier, better known as Max Le Verrier, also known under the pseudonym Artus (1891–1973) was a French sculptor.
He was known for being a pioneer of the Parisian Art Deco movement, creating decorative art objects often in bronze as well as historical sculptures. Max Le Verrier was born on January 29, 1891 in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France, to a French father who was a goldsmith and jeweler, and a Belgian mother. His parents separated when he was a child, and he spent much time in boarding schools.
He served as a pilot in the French Army during World War I. Le Verrier attended the University of Art and Design in Geneva (formerly the École supérieure des beaux-arts de Genève), studying under Marcel Bouraine and Pierre Le Faguays.
He returned to Paris in 1919. He opened his studio in 1919 in Paris. In 1925, he exhibited his work at the Exposition internationale des Arts décoratifs et industriels modernes in Paris, where he won a gold medal.
His first popular sculpture was a pelican in 1925. In 1921, Le Verrier married Jeanne Hubrecht, they had two children. In the early 1920s, he inherited a small metal foundry and in 1926 he began making decorative objects in his own workshop. During World War II, Le Verrier's house was used as a mortuary for the Resistance.
He was arrested in 1944 for his links to the resistance against the Nazis.
He was able to reopen his workshop after the war. His workshop was located at 30 rue Deparcieux, and he had a small shop located at 100 rue du Théâtre in Paris. Le Verrier's workshop created bronze lamps, ashtrays, bookends, desk sets and hood ornaments; often depicting nude women or animals in an Art Deco style. He used a few different styles of patina, including the notable "green" style, and often mounted them on Italian marble bases. In addition to bronze, he also worked in ivory, zinc, terracotta and ceramics. He also cast works for other sculptors, including Pierre Le Faguays, Marcel Bouraine, André Vincent Becquerel, and Jules Edmont Masson.
Le Verrier died on June 6, 1973 in Paris. His work is in the collections of public museums, including the Musée d'Orsay. Le Verrier's great-grandson, Damien Blanchet, continued to produce his sculptures after his death, under the name Maison Max Le Verrier.
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Sculpture visible at our gallery in L'Isle sur la Sorgue (France), on weekends.
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