Thursday, September 23, 2010

Object of the Day: “Doux Retour” by Émile Bruchon, 1890

In many ways, along with the Moreau brothers, the work of Émile Bruchon epitomizes the French Belle Époque sculptural style. Seeming weightlessness, flowing garments, delicately rendered vegetation and beatific expressions define the spirit of the era.


Doux Retour (Sweet Return) is another allegory of Spring—a favorite theme of Nineteenth Century French artists. Here we see a female figure—young and lithe—who appears to be landing with gentle grace to the earth. She wears a diadem reminiscent of Diana, the Goddess of the Hunt. As she alights, her gown catches the breeze. She bears a bouquet of newly blossomed flowers in her right hand and cradles a branch, heavy with ripe apples—in her left.

The replication of motion was one of the hallmarks of Bruchon’s work. From the movement of her garments to the power in her limbs, this sculpture speaks of energy. Even her face appears to be captured mid-expression as if she’s about to smile broadly.

Artists of this period were interested in capturing a single moment in time. Bruchon has achieved just that with this solid snapshot of the changing of the seasons.

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