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Jean-Marie Baumel : ウィキペディア英語版 | Jean-Marie Baumel
Jean-Marie Baumel was a French sculptor born in Marseille on 2 November 1912 and who died in Neuilly/Eure on 2 June 1978.〔Oxford index (Benezit Dictionary of Artists )〕 == Biography ==
Jean-Marie Baumel studied in Paris at the École des Beaux-Arts under Henri Bouchard. He exhibited at the Paris Salon des Artistes Français. He received a silver medal in 1935 for the composition "L'’Aumône", the Chenavard prize and a gold medal in 1936 for a sculpture in stone called "Idylle", the Puvis de Chavannes prize in 1965 for his work on the entrance to the Church of Notre-Dame de la Salette in Paris and, in 1978, the "médaille d’honneur" for a plaster statue depicting a standing nude. In 1937, he decorated one of the façades of the Vatican's pavilion at the Paris exhibition of 1937 and in 1939 he was commissioned to execute a statue of Claudius Gallet for the city of Annecy. After the war he exhibited at the Salon d'Automne and the Salon de la Jeune Sculpture from 1959 to 1964. In 1950 he was commissioned to decorate the entrances to the Saint-Antoine tunnel in Marseille with two low-reliefs. In 1956 he worked on a "Monument à la République" in Agde, replacing a bronze fountain decoration melted down by the Germans in 1941 and completed a 1939-1945 war memorial for the city of Dieppe railway station. He also sculpted a composition covering a group of bathers for the seaside town of Bandol. He was commissioned to create two wooden cariatides for the Palace of Justice in Abidjan. He also produced several medallions for the French mint (Monnaie de Paris).
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