"Bronze Bust - Georges Chauvel Art Deco"
Bust, bronze with gilded and brushed silver patina, Georges Chauvel (1886-1962), signed, c. 1930. Georges Chauvel studied sculpture at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Rouen in the studio of Alphonse Guilloux, then he trained without a teacher through personal reflection. In 1917, he exhibited at the Moleux gallery Le Lanceur de grenades acquired by Henri Leblanc, a replica of which called the Coupe de la Somme (in) was won by the New Zealand military rugby team, the Trench Blacks, on tour in 1917. His career as a sculptor especially took off after the First World War. He exhibited for the first time at the "Salon des Indépendants" in 1919. He is the author of numerous monuments to the dead such as that of Long (Somme), produced in 1920, which represents a woman crowned with laurels with a soldier at her feet. dying. You can also admire one of his sculptures (a female nude walking) in the Reuilly garden in Paris, as well as at the Château de Dourdan museum. On May 31, 1921, he married Berthe Émilienne Deldrève in Paris, whom he had met in 1918 with his friend Marcel-Gaillard.