By David and Constance Yates
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| Louis-Oscar Roty, Mes parents, 1886, silver plaque. |
The medal as we know it today had its origins in the Italian Renaissance with the circular bronze commemorative portraits produced by Pisanello (c. 1395-1455) during the mid-15th century. Medals are often viewed in a numismatic context because they share certain obvious characteristics with coins. However, as a dealer in European sculpture and drawings for over twenty years, my interest in medals, especially cast medals, is not so much based on their numismatic characteristics, as on their aesthetic appeal. As intimate sculpture in relief format, medals are something to hold and turn in the hand; they are personal objects of great beauty, which provoke and reward intellectual contemplation.
A medal can either be struck or cast, both techniques that were developed in the classical world and perfected during the Italian Renaissance. The process of striking consists first of the preparation of the desired images on two dies followed by the impression by force of these dies onto a prepared metal blank. In antiquity and throughout the Middle Ages this force was provided by the simple act of hammering. The invention of the screw press in early 16th-century Italy enabled medals to be struck with greater speed and control. The result is an object sharply and precisely defined, but often rather dry and lacking in sculptural elegance. Not surprisingly, striking was, and is today, the method utilized for mass production of both coins and medals. Casting requires the preparation of two original uniface models—the obverse and reverse—in wax, plaster, or less commonly, wood or stone. These models are utilized to create negative molds in a soft material such as terracotta or gesso. Once the molds have dried, they are fitted together leaving channels into which the molten metal is poured. After cooling, the medal in its raw state is removed from the mold. At this stage a careful hand finishing is required which includes filing, chasing, and often the application of chemically based patinations and thin coats of lacquer. The final result is a unique work of art, with examples of the same medal exhibiting subtle variations in color and surface detail.
The earliest medals in 16th-century France were produced by goldsmiths working in a style which combined the native Gothic heraldic tradition with an obvious awareness of Italian Renaissance portraiture. From the outset, the production of medals in France was highly dependent on the patronage of the crown. This may be viewed in comparison to the early history of the medal in Italy, where artists relied more on the commissions of private patrons, resulting in the possibility of greater artistic freedom. The invitations extended by François I (1494-1547) to Italian artists and craftsmen, among them Benvenuto Cellini and the aged Leonardo, to help embellish his court at Fontainebleau demonstrate the lure that Italian aesthetic innovation had in France.
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| Germain Pilon, Portrait of René de Birague, gilt bronze. Courtesy of the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris. |
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| Guillaume Dupré, Portrait of Marc Antonio Memmo, Doge of Venice |
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| Jean Warin, Portraits of the future king Louis XIV and his mother Anne of Austria |
By the beginning of the 18th century, French medals had been exported throughout Europe and were enormously influential. These precisely struck images were not only extremely effective in promoting the glories of the French state, but also provided artistic models which were appropriated and altered for local consumption from Portugal to Russia. As Mark Jones has pointed out, the great transformation which Warin set in motion at the end of the 17th century changed the very meaning of the medal “both to those who made them and those who received them.” This evolution from artist-cast and finished celebrations of the individual to mechanically-struck objects of political and cultural propaganda remained the norm in France until the Revolution of 1789 brought an end to the ancien régime.
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| Louis-François Jeannest, Portrait of Dominique Vivant Denon, 1812. Cast bronze. Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. |
With the Revolution came new artistic possibilities. Napoleon viewed the continuation of the state controlled medal as important, even to the extent of having designs sent from Paris for his approval during foreign campaigns. Vivant Dominique, Baron Denon, called Vivant Denon (1747-1825) was named Directeur général des musées français in 1804, and, as Bonaparte’s advisor on all artistic affairs, was responsible for including medallists in the Prix de Rome competition. The medal thus officially took its place alongside painting, sculpture and architecture, occupying two seats at the French Academy in Rome. Denon, undoubtedly influenced by the earlier example of Colbert, supervised a comprehensive medallic production of Napoleon and the Empire period which was rigidly neoclassical in style. Denon’s portrait, executed in 1812 by Louis-François Jeannest (French, active late 18th-early 19th century), captures the lively intelligence of this important figure in a manner which is realistic rather than classicizing. Although artistic freedom became a possibility as a result of the revolution, not all artists chose to break with the style of the ancien régime. Indeed, the artistic vocabulary of most official medallic commissions remained neoclassical until just after the reign of Napoleon III. Artists inspired by the creative explosion of the Romantic movement during the 1820’s and 30’s, however, began searching for new modes of expression.
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| Pierre-Jean David D’Angers, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. |
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| Pierre-Jean David D’Angers, Pierre-François, Comte de Réal. Original wax relief on slate. 135 x 122 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
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| Pierre-Jean David D’Angers, Les quatres sargents de la Rochelle. Cast bronze. Diam.: 88 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
In executing the original models for his portrait medallions David worked primarily in wax on slate and, less frequently, in terracotta. Due to the fragile nature of the materials, few wax models have survived. One of these remarkable images depicts Pierre-François, Comte de Réal (1757-1834), who was a member during the Revolution of Les amis de la constitution and of the Jacobin movement, and the chief accuser at the tribunal of the 17th of August. Imprisoned after the death of Georges Jacques Danton, Réal managed to survive the Reign of Terror. A counsel of state under Napoleon I, he was forced into exile in 1816. Finally at the age of seventy-three, he became politically active once again during the Revolution of 1830. Réal’s face, lines deeply etched, reflects the experience of this cunning political survivor and the coiffure, freely drawn and modeled, is typical of David’s Romantic sculptural style. David was a lifelong republican who strongly felt his art had, first and foremost, the moral obligation to “glorify great men, noble causes and inspiring accomplishments.”
His medal Les quatre sargents de la Rochelle memorializes common soldiers, condemned to death for conspiring against the Restoration government of Louis XVIII. David had initially planned to execute a monument in their memory, but was forced to abandon his politically risky plans for lack of financial support. The obverse of this medal depicts the four sergeants in profile flanking the fasces, or emblem of state authority since Roman times, which has been crowned by the symbolic bonnet de la liberté. On the reverse, La Liberté herself places four laurel wreaths on the executioner’s block. For David, it was une dette sacrée (“a sacred debt”) to commemorate these martyrs for the cause of liberty.
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| Pierre-Jean David D’Angers, Niccolò Paganini, 1834. Cast bronze. Diam.: 150 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
In 1833 David immortalized Niccolò Paganini (1782-1840) in a bust that is considered to be one of the finest sculpted portraits of the Romantic period, and his medal of 1834 is one of the icons of the Galerie. For David, this musician was a man of unparalleled force and genius. The strong brow ridges and exaggerated cranial dome reflect David’s interest in the expressive possibilities of the phrenological theories current in the early 19th century. In his journal David writes of the experience of depicting Paganini, “it seems to me that the soul has a tyrannical power over this too weak body—he never laughs, he has too much genius...When I told him that I wanted to depict him...with his head leaning forward, and to the side, like a man playing the violin, he told me, yes, because I take from my interior to impress my exterior.” This medal is a prime example of David’s ability to concretize the psychological characteristics of his subjects by subtly exaggerating their physiognomy. David was a friend of virtually every important writer and poet of the Romantic age. Indeed, poems in praise of his sculpture were written by Victor Hugo and Charles Nodier, among many others. The poet Alfred de Musset (1810-1857), the handsome, dissolute lover of George Sand and author of the autobiographical Confessions d’un enfant du siècle was modeled by David in 1831. The meticulously sculpted coiffure frames the face of this elegant and sensitive young man, barely out of his teens. Depicted in three-quarter view and high relief, the Musset medallion shares its unusual frontal composition with David’s portraits of Balzac, Géricault and the young Bonaparte. Though rare in his medallic œuvre, these frontal depictions have the impact and monumentality of David’s portrait busts in intimate form. In a very real sense David d’Angers reinvigorated, almost single-handedly, the Renaissance tradition of the artist cast medal in 19th century France.
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| Pierre-Jean David D’Angers, Alfred de Musset, 1831. Cast bronze. Diam.: 172 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
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| Hubert Ponscarme, Napoleon III at the inauguration of Boulevard Haussmann in 1866 |
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| Louis-Oscar Roty, Memorial to the assassinated French President Sadi Carnot in 1894; ANS Collection. |
The result of this creative ferment was a kind of “Golden Age” of the French medal during the last quarter of the 19th century. Not only did the French state continue to supply medalists with important commissions, but it became fashionable in France for private patrons to mark significant events in their lives with medals. One of the most important of these patrons was the connoisseur and critic Claude Roger-Marx. A tireless advocate on behalf of the medal as art form, Roger-Marx authored numerous articles and catalogues on the subject, was instrumental in the hiring of contemporary artists to design new coinage for the French Mint, and at the Exposition Universelle of 1900, organized a special exhibition devoted to the art of the medal. As founder of Les amis de la médaille française, he was responsible for commissioning some of the most beautiful medallic images created at the end of the 19th century.
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| Jules Clement Chaplain, self-portrait of the artist. |
The career of Jules Clement Chaplain (1839-1909) is emblematic of this “Golden Age.” A winner of the Prix de Rome in 1863, Chaplain returned to Paris in 1869 where he found official success almost immediately, winning notice in the Salons of 1870 and 1872. In rapid succession, Chaplain was named in 1877 the official medallist of the French government, in 1878 a chevalier of the Legion of Honor, and in 1881 to the seat at the Académie des Beaux Arts left vacant by the death of Jacques-Edouard Gatteaux. In a striking self-portrait Chaplain depicts himself as the obviously proud recipient of the many rewards showered upon him by the French artistic and political establishment. Indeed, he was responsible for the official portraits of every president of the French Republic from Edme Patrice Mac-Mahon in 1877 to Émile Loubet in 1899. Chaplain received the commission for engraving the gold coinage of France at the urging of Roger-Marx, and his official gold medal commemorating the visit of Czar Nicholas and Czarina Alexandra of Russia to Paris in 1896 was called, by no less a critic than Forrer “a masterpiece and one of the finest ever struck.”
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| Jules Clement Chaplain, Sarah Gustave Simon, 1890. Cast bronze. 215 x 160 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
The success and longevity of Chaplain’s career as official medallist of the French government alone would be sufficient to secure him a place of historical importance. It is, however, his series of cast portrait medals that constitutes his great achievement as an artist. Chaplain, by the late 1870’s, had developed an intimate and realistic style of portraiture. Less concerned with the three-dimensionality of David’s style, Chaplain allows his portraits to emerge from and interact with the surrounding field. He depicts his subjects in a manner vigorous yet refined, establishing his compositions with a series of free and sweeping lines. The politician Jules Simon commissioned Chaplain to model two relief portraits of his wife Sarah Gustave Simon in 1889. This classically beautiful woman is portrayed in everyday dress, her hair pulled back in a chignon, with several wisps falling free along her neck. The folds in the sleeve of her blouse crinkle along the shoulder and arm drawing attention to her long neck and aquiline nose. Sarah’s beautifully modeled face is accentuated by the coiffure which appears to be drawn into the bronze.
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| Jules Clement Chaplain, Jean-Léon Gérome, 1885. Cast bronze. Diam.: 100 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. | Jules Clement Chaplain, Reverse, Jean-Léon Gérome: Pittura, 1885. Cast bronze. Diam.: 100 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
Beginning with his portrait of the medallist Auguste Barre in 1879, Chaplain executed a marvelous series of some twenty cast medals representing prominent artists and architects of his day. This series, obviously inspired by the Romantic vision of David, ranges from the great academic painter Ernest Meissonier to the visionary architect of the Paris Opera Charles Garnier. His portrait of the great orientalist Jean-Léon Gérome (1824-1904) at the age of sixty is a tour-de-force example of Chaplain’s technique in its depiction of the chiselled bone structure of the artist’s face, and the freely drawn hair, extending in short wavy lines almost to the edge of the medal. The reverse, “Pittura”, surrounds the muse of painting with images drawn from Gérome’s celebrated works: the sphinx, the Blue Mosque and the gladiator’s helmet. Chaplain, in fact, created some of the most masterful reverse designs in the history of the medal.
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| Jules Clement Chaplain, Reverse, Musee Condee and its gardens; Private Collection. |
Another beautiful example is the reverse of a medal that he created to celebrate the gift of Chantilly and its extensive art collections in 1886 to the French Institute by Henri d’Orléans, Duc d’Aumale. Chaplain, in this elegant depiction of pure architecture, modeled the château, its walled gardens and celebrated stables, in low relief against the landscape of the surrounding countryside. The Musée Condé, as the collection became known, flanks the Duke’s coat of arms at the top of the composition while the date of the gift crops it horizontally at the bottom of the field.
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| Jules Clement Chaplain, Reverse Charles Gounod. Silvered galvanotype. Diam.: 230 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
His reverse celebrating the composer Charles Gounod (1818-1893) is both elegant and complex. The figure of Inspiration sits deep in thought, her quill pen in hand, at a Gothic-Revival organ whose vertical elements extend and disappear into the upper left margin of the medal. The musical forms favored by the composer—Drames Lyriques Messes Oratorios Symphonies—are superimposed over a branch, the leaves of which entwine the letters and reach toward Inspiration’s long and elegant braid. As was his custom, Chaplain lavishes particular attention on the coiffure, which is drawn in sinuous lines and crowned by a jewel-like floral wreath. Inspiration rests her hands on the edge of a composition book whose cover lists Gounod’s most celebrated work, the opera Faust. Her delicately slippered foot rests on a stool, while the strap of her purse subtly reveals the form of her leg by gathering the material of her gown.
Chaplain was one of the first artists to produce models for cast medals which were equally effective when reduced in size and struck. This had the effect of blurring the traditional distinctions between these two techniques and opening, by the end of the 19th century, the field of medallic art to increased experimentation by artists who did not necessarily follow the conventional career path of Chaplain’s generation.
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| Alexandre Charpentier, Hommage à Émile Zola. Cast pewter. Diam.: 195 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
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| Alexandre Charpentier, Société Nationale des Beaux Arts, 1890. Cast bronze. 252 x 165 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
Because of his friendship with Auguste Rodin and Constantin Meunier, Charpentier had an intimate understanding of the Realist sculptural idiom of his day, as the gilt bronze relief of a young man operating a printing press amply demonstrates. The straining muscular beauty of the young laborer, at a time when the industrial revolution was in full swing, is juxtaposed to the precisionist lines of the press; man and machine are locked in a dance that anticipates the modernist vocabulary of the 1920’s.
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| Alexandre Charpentier, L’Imprimeur. Cast gilt bronze. 220 x 207 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
After failing in his only attempt at the Prix de Rome, Charpentier became increasingly involved in the decorative arts, often collaborating with other artists in the production of furniture, elements of boiserie, boxes, and other objects ornamented with finely cast bronze reliefs. Experimenting widely with materials and techniques, he created decorative objects in silver, pewter, ceramic and even molded paper. In 1892, Charpentier was instrumental in founding Les Cinq, a group of like-minded artists dedicated to the integration of the fine and applied arts.
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| Alexandre Charpentier, Le bain. Cast bronze. 153 x132 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
In his projects as a member of Les Cinq, Charpentier modeled plaquettes and reliefs which he meant to be integrated into furniture and other decorative objects. Most of these works have, naturally, since been separated from their intended contexts. The elegant series of plaquettes—La sculpture, La peinture, Le chant, and La musique—were originally conceived by Charpentier as furniture mounts. All four images are emblematic of Charpentier’s skill at capturing his impression of a fleeting moment in time. In fact, Le bain is a sculptural equivalent to the famous Degas etching Sortie du bain, c. 1882. Charpentier captures the model in the fleeting instant that she steps into the bath and his indication of the tiles behind the tub, to which he has applied a painterly patina, gives a subtle surface texture to the background.
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| Alexandre Charpentier, Le cri, c. 1900. Cast gilt bronze. Diam.: 60 mm. Private Collection, U.S.A. |
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| Ovide Yencesse, Serbia, c. 1916. Cast bronze. Diam.: 195 mm. Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. |
The authors wish to express their thanks to the late Mr. David Daniels, Mr. James David Draper Ms. Willow Johnson and Ms. Roberta Olson for their generous assistance in the preparation of this article, to The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York and to the anonymous private collectors for their gracious permission to reproduce the medals which they acquired from us. They are also grateful to the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris for their permission to reproduce the medal of Germain Pilon.