19th & 20th Century Sculpture
19th & 20th Century Sculpture
Satan
Lot Closed
July 12, 11:09 AM GMT
Estimate
10,000 - 12,000 GBP
Lot Details
Description
Jean-Jacques Feuchère
French
1807 - 1852
Satan
signed: JFeuchère
bronze, green-brown patina
21.2cm., 8 3/8 in.
Satan by Jean-Jacques Feuchère is an iconic work of French Romanticism at its height. Feuchère, son of the bronze maker and finisher Jacques-François Feuchère, was trained by the sculptors Cortot and Ramey.
The present model was originally designed as a part of a mantelpiece decoration, with Satan positioned at the centre flanked by two vases in the shape of bats. The plaster model was exhibited at the 1834 Salon, as well as a small bronze version the following year. Satanic subjects were popular among the Romantic artists of the 1830s, who felt inspired by literary works such as Dante’s Inferno (1303-1321), Milton’s Paradise Lost (1667) and Goethe’s Faust (1808). Feuchère portrays Satan as a fallen angel, expelled from heaven, with his wings wrapped around him, which seems broadly derived from Dürer’s Melancholy (circa 1514).
RELATED LITERATURE
P. Fusco and H. W. Janson, The Romantics to Rodin, Los Angeles, 1980, p.266-267, no. 137