Louis Dejean
French sculptor and engraver
Louis Dejean (June 9, 1872 in Paris – January 6, 1953 in Paris), was a French sculptor and engraver. He worked in the workshop of Gaston Schnegg, along with Antoine Bourdelle, Charles Despiau, Robert Wlérick, Léon-Ernest Drivier, François Pompon, Alfred Jean Halou, Charles Malfray, Auguste de Niederhausern, Henry Arnold, Jane Poupelet and Yvonne Serruys.[1]
Works
- La Parisienne, Dame au grand manteau. Sculpture (Statuette), dimensions: 27 cm x 45 cm x 34 cm. Date: 1904. Musée d'Orsay, first floor - Section 57. Acquisition: Procurement service to living artists (1904)[2]
- Bronze medal from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1909. Dimensions 80 x 52 mm, weight 195 grams.
- Muse elongated, outer stone sculpture (1937 order). Exposition Internationale des Arts et Techniques dans la Vie Moderne : 1937. Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, avenue de New York, Paris XVI (France)
References
External links
- Louis Dejean in American public collections, on the French Sculpture Census website
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World War I War Memorials in France
- Monuments aux Morts
- World War I
- World War I casualties
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- Herbert Baker
- Reginald Blomfield
- Alfred-Alphonse Bottiau
- Edgar-Henri Boutry
- Lucien Brasseur
- Robert Coin
- William Harrison Cowlishaw
- Camille Debert
- Louis Dejean
- Edmond Delphaut
- Félix-Alexandre Desruelles
- Charles Desvergnes
- Émile Fernand-Dubois
- Paul Gasq
- Charles Holden
- Raoul Josset
- Augustin Lesieux
- Edwin Lutyens
- Frederick William MacMonnies
- George Henry Paulin
- Charles Marie Louis Joseph Sarrabezolles
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