Alfred Barye
Alfred "Alf" Barye, usually known as Alfred Barye "Le Fils", was a French sculptor, of the Belle Époque, pupil of his father the artist Antoine-Louis Barye. In cooperation with Émile-Coriolan Guillemin, Barye did the artwork for "The Arab Warrior Knight on Horseback". Included in Barye's oeuvre were animalier bronzes as well as Oriental subjects. At his father's request, he signed his work as "fils" to differentiate his work from his father's.
Early life
Alfred Barye was born in Paris, France, on 21 January 1839, the son of Antoine-Louis Barye. He learned his craft of animalier sculptor under the watchful eye of his father who was one of the original pioneers of animal sculpture in the mid-to-late 19th century. The younger Barye didn't always get along with his father; there were times when the two of them were not on speaking terms. Until instructed not to do so, Alfred Barye signed some of his bronzes "A. Barye", which the senior Barye objected to because it created confusion as to which Barye, father or son, created the sculpture.Career
He specialized in the animalier school in the production of bronze sculptures. Although a fine artist in his own right, he struggled to create his own identity living in the shadow of his more famous father. The vast majority of his pieces are signed "A. Barye, fils" while some are marked "Barye" or "A. Barye" which created some confusion – intentional or not – with those of his father. The majority of the sculptures leaving the Barye foundry were sand castings rather than lost-wax castings. Alfred Barye typically used mid-brown patinas but would sometimes add green and auburn-colored hues in the patination process. Any Barye bronze – by father or son – will generally have an exquisite patina. Antoine-Louis was particularly finicky with his patinas and would not allow other foundries to apply them, preferring to do it himself for appearance and quality control purposes. Alfred, too, would not let a sculpture leave his workshop without a perfectly applied and visually pleasing patina.Alfred Barye did a production of bronze sculptures and focused his attention on race horses or horses on the move. Some of his well-known bronzes are The Arab Warrior Knight on Horseback.
Death and legacy
Barye died in Paris in 1882. He is known for the precision detail in his bronze sculptures, as shown in the pheasant sculpture. Barye was known for great attention to detail on his bronzes. He produced a number of bird sculptures as well as genre figures. Alfred Barye's final submission at the Salon de Louvre was in 1882. He received posthumous "honourable mention" in the 1897 Salon for the work Aide Fauconnier Indien, Retour de Chasse à la Gazelle.Museum holdings
His bronzes are now in many museum collections:- Louvre Museum, Paris
- Musée d'Orsay, Paris
- Brooklyn Museum, New York City
- Fogg Museum, Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, Massachusetts
- Bush-Reisinger Museum, Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, Massachusetts
- Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, Massachusetts
- São Paulo Museum of Modern Art, Brazil
- The Israel Museum, Jerusalem
- Appleton Museum of Art, Ocala, Florida
Exhibitions
- The racehorse Walter Scott, 1864
- Italian jester, 1882
Signature examples