Marcel DAMBOISE (1903-1992)
Head of Henri, 1949
Terra
cottaprint
with bronze patina
Signed and dated (behind the left shoulder): Damboise 1949
H. 28.5 ; W. 20 ; D. 21 cm
Inv. MD S-124-11
Provenance:
Artist's studio
By descent
The model is the youngest son of Aimé Portier, a friend of Damboise, head of department at the hospital in Algiers. Henri Portier was also the nephew of the painter Richard Maguet (1896-1940).
BIOGRAPHY :
After a brief stint at the École des Beaux-Arts in Marseille, Marcel Damboise apprenticed as a stonecutter and moved to Paris, to La Ruche, in 1926, with his friend the sculptor Louis Dideron. In 1928, he married Yvette Dorignac, daughter of the painter Georges Dorignac. He rubbed shoulders with the painter's entourage, exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants and met Paul Cornet, Charles Despiau, Aristide Maillol and Charles Malfray, who became his spiritual teachers. During his stay at the Villa Abd-el-Tif in Algeria, between 1932 and 1935, he executed numerous commissions, including the Fondouk Monument, which were noticed by Albert Camus, with whom he became friends. During the war, in France, he created a large female figure for the city of Bordeaux and a high relief of Saint Marcel for the church in Vitry-sur-Seine. He stayed again in Algeria from 1948 to 1954 and, on his return to Paris, was appointed professor at the École des Beaux-Arts and became a founding member of the Groupe des Neuf.
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