BARBEDIENNE, Ferdinand - b. 1810 Calvados, d. 1892 Paris - WGA

BARBEDIENNE, Ferdinand

(b. 1810 Calvados, d. 1892 Paris)

French metalworker and manufacturer, well known as a bronze founder. The son of a small farmer from Calvados, he started his career as a dealer in wallpaper in Paris. In 1838 he went into partnership with Achille Collas (1795-1859), who had just invented a machine to create miniature bronze replicas of statues. Together they started a business selling miniatures of antique statues from museums all over Europe.

From 1843 they extended their scope by reproducing the work of living artists and also diversified by making enamelled household objects. With the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian war in 1870 the firm briefly had to switch to cannon founding owing to the shortage of metals but resumed business afterwards. Following Barbedienne’s death in 1892, the firm was carried on by his nephew Gustave Leblanc until 1952.

Among the principal artists reproduced by the firm were Antoine Louis Barye and Auguste Rodin.

Bust of Lucius Verus
Bust of Lucius Verus by

Bust of Lucius Verus

Lucius Verus (130-169 AD) was the Roman Emperor from 161 to 169. This bronze was made after the antique. It is inscribed: F.BARBEDIENNE.Fondeur.

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