Georges Gardet (October 11, 1863 – 6 February 1939) was a French sculptor and animalier.
French painter
Le Lion et la Lionne, gardens of the Vaux-le-Vicomte castel, Maincy (Seine-et-Marne)Eternal Youth, finial figure for the Manitoba Legislative Building, WinnipegDrama in the Desert, Parc Montsouris
Biography
The son of a sculptor, Gardet attended the École des Beaux-Arts in the atelier of Aimé Millet and Emmanuel Fremiet (another noted animalier). Gardet's wife Madeleine was the sister of painter and decorator Jean Francis Auburtin, who collaborated with Gardet on work for the Parisian Exposition Universelle (1900).
Gardet was made an Officer of the Legion of Honor in 1900, and was a member of the Académie des Beaux-Arts, and the Society of French Artists.
Work
bronze Drama of the Desert, Parc Montsouris, Paris, 1891
two animal groups (tiger attacking buffalo, leopard catching a turtle) flanking the entrance to the Musée des Sciences of Laval, France, 1892[1]
lion groups at the Pont Alexandre III, Paris, circa 1900
lions at the Jardin du Luxembourg, Paris
six bronze crocodiles (or "sea monsters") surrounding the base of monument The Triumph of Republic by Jules Dalou, Place de la Nation, added in 1908, scrapped by the Germans in 1941
gilded finial figure Eternal Youth, along with two bison flanking the grand staircase inside, for the Manitoba Legislative Building, Winnipeg, 1918[2]
two groups of deer for the grounds of the Château de Sceaux in Sceaux, Hauts-de-Seine (outside Paris), 1933
bronze lion on the grounds of St. Mark's School, Southborough, Massachusetts
bronze bison, Harris Circle at east entrance to Pioneers Park, Lincoln, Nebraska installed April 14–15, 1930 and dedicated May 17, 1930
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