La Juive d'Alger, 1862.
Silvered, gilded and enameled bronze proof on a gilded bronze pedestal.
Signed and dated on the mantle band.
46 x 34 x 19 cm.
One flower is missing.
Provenance:
London, Sotheby's, November 29, 1991, n°130.
London, Christie's, March 17, 1994, no. 242.
Bibliography:
Charles Cordier, l'Autre et l'Ailleurs, by C. Barthe, L.de Margerie, E.Papet, M.Vigli, Éditions de la Martinière, Paris, 2004, illustrated under no. 339, p.185.
Jewish women in Algiers were more accessible models for artists than Muslim women at the time of the Conquest. Cordier's ethnographic sculptures are accompanied by another of the artist's innovative proposals: polychromy, which contrasts with the traditional whiteness of the marbles exhibited at the Salon. In France and Germany, archaeologists at the beginning of the 19th century had just rediscovered the almost erased polychromy of ancient architecture and sculpture.
The "Juive d'Alger" came in a wide range of rich materials: silver and gilded bronze, marble, onyx, porphyry, enamels and precious stones. The opulent Second Empire, with its sumptuous interiors, adopted Cordier's brilliant, precious art.
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