Lucien Charles E. Alliot French Art Deco Bronze The Gazelles 1930 | Statues | Art Deco Collection
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Lucien Charles E. Alliot French Art Deco Bronze The Gazelles 1930

Item #3576

Lucien Alliot French Art Deco Bronze The Gazelles 1930. The brown patina on a marble base signed on the bronze L Alliot and stamped bronze on the deer. This particular piece has exceptional rhythm where the two gazelles interplay in a movement depicting leaping over the hills or water. Very three-dimensional treatment showing the movement of the animals.

 

Lucien Charles Eduoard Alliot (1877-1967), the sculptor was born in 1877 in Paris, France. His work was part of the sculpture event in the art competition at the 1924 Summer Olympics.  He exhibited regularly at the Salon des Artistes Français, member and the gold medal in 1920, out of competition, and member of the sculpture jury from 1934 to 1939. Alliot was well known for his figurative sculptures which were exhibited for many years at the Salon de Paris. He received a third-place award in 1907 (which included funds for travel expenses) and a first-place award l in 1920. After he declared himself out of the artistic competition, he became a jury member at the Salon evaluating sculptural works from 1934 to 1939. Alliot created a number of allegorical groups: La Paix in 1939, and a number of religious illustrations: Sacré Cœur in 1924, La Vierge Marie et l’Enfant Jésus in 1925, and Saint-François d’Assise in 1933.

 

Measurements

30″ W x 15.75″ T x 6″ D

Price (USD)

$ 3,800
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