
''Wounded Niobid'' (1822),
Louvre
'James Pradier', also known as 'Jean-Jacques Pradier' (
1790 -
June 4,
1852) was a
Swiss-born
French sculptor best known for his work in the
neoclassical style.
Born in
Geneva, Pradier left for
Paris in
1807 to work with his elder brother, an
engraver. He won a
Prix de Rome that enabled him to study in
Rome from
1814 to
1818. He studied under
Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres in Paris. In
1827 he became a member of the ''
Académie des beaux-arts'' and a professor at the
École des Beaux-Arts. Unlike many of his contemporaries, Pradier oversaw the finish of his sculptures himself. He was a friend of the Romantic poets
Alfred de Musset,
Victor Hugo and
Théophile Gautier, and his atelier was a center, presided over by his beautiful mistress,
Juliette Drouet, who became Hugo's mistress in
1833.
The cool neoclassical surface finish of his sculptures is charged with an eroticism that their mythological themes can barely disguise. At the
Salon of
1834, Pradier's ''Satyr and Bacchante'' created a scandalous sensation. Some claimed to recognize the features of the sculptor and his mistress, Juliette Drouet. When the prudish government of
Louis-Philippe refused to purchase it, Count
Anatole Demidoff bought it and took it to his palazzo in
Florence. (It has since come back to the
Louvre).

Memorial bust of the duc d'Orléans, 1842 (Louvre Museum)
Other famous sculptures by Pradier are the figures of Fame in the spandrels of the
Arc de Triomphe, decorative figures at the
Madeleine, and his twelve ''Victories'' inside the dome of the
Invalides, all in Paris. Aside from large-scale sculptures Pradier collaborated with
Froment-Meurice, designing
jewelry in a 'Renaissance-Romantic' style.
Pradier's importance as an artist in his day is demonstrated by the fact that his portrait is included in
François Joseph Heim's painting ''
Charles X Distributing Prizes to Artists as the Salon of 1824'', now in the
Louvre Museum, Paris.
He is buried in the
Père-Lachaise cemetery. Much of the contents of his studio were bought up after his death by the city museum of Geneva.
Pradier has been largely forgotten in modern times. In
1846 Gustave Flaubert said of him, however:
:''This is a great artist, a true Greek, the most antique of all the moderns; a man who is distracted by nothing, not by politics, nor socialism, and who, like a true workman, sleeves rolled up, is there to do his task morning til night with the will to do well and the love of his art.''
An exhibition, ''Statues de chair: sculptures de James Pradier (1790-1852)'' at Geneva's Musée d'art et d'histoire (October
1985 - February
1986) and Paris,
Musée du Luxembourg, (February - May
1986) roused some interest in Pradier's career and esthetic.
References
★ Fusco, Peter and H. W. Janson, editors, ''The Romantics to Rodin'', Los Angeles County Museum of Art 1980
★ Hargrove, June, ''The Statues of Paris: An Open-Air Pantheon - The Histories of Statues of famous Men'', Vendrome Press, New York 1989
★ Mackay, James, ''The Dictionary of Sculptors in Bronze'', Antique Collectors Club, Woodbridge, Suffolk 1977
★ ''Nineteenth Century French Sculpture: Monuments for the Middle Class'', J.B. Speed Museum, Louisville Kentucky 1971
External link
★
Index of pages devoted to Pradier's works (French language)