null

Contact Us

  • silla | antiques & art
  • (717) 708-9017
  • 117 W Burd St. Shippensburg, PA 17257

About us

silla was born out of a passion for beautiful objects: special pieces with aesthetic and historical significance. In 2009, after years of collecting, Andrew Silla and his wife Grace began to work privately with clients from their residence in Southern Maryland. Quickly outgrowing the space, the business was moved from Maryland to Pennsylvania in 2012 and after several warehouse location changes it was firmly settled in the present brick-and-mortar location in downtown Shippensburg.

The 9000 square foot brick-and-mortar gallery is home to a large collection of works of art and estate jewelry. We specialize in sculpture circa 1860 through 1930 with a particular emphasis on the Animaliers and as such the gallery always has a very large collection of exceptional European and American sculpture available on display.

Skip to main content

"Running Stag", bronze sculpture | Jules Moigniez

Moigniez, Jules

SKU:
103EJB19P

This item is sold. Please email sales@sillafineantiques.com to be notified when similar items become available. Our gallery is very active in hunting down unique pieces and we will almost certainly be able to find something special for your collection.

   Absolutely love it, but price is holding you back?   NOTIFY ME OF A PRICE DROP!

catalog text

BRONZE SCULPTURE OF "RUNNING STAG" AFTER MODEL BY JULES MOIGNIEZ (FRENCH, 1835-94)
Patinated bronze over original slate base; signed in script "J. Moigniez", ca. late 19th century
Item # 103EJB19P 

Typical of Moigniez models, the casting of the present "Running Stag" is of unquestionable quality, a statement of technical expertise. A most pleasing and complex modeling of a running European red stag, it captures the proud and powerful animal on the lookout for danger, always ready to move at the slightest hint of a threat. The cast captures the fine surface texture beautifully, the stag's muscled body and mottled fur depicted with utmost realism. Note the crisp finishing work, the fine hairs intricately incised along the legs and throughout the applied foliage, much of this with a very lightly hammered texturing as well. All surfaces are finished in a very complex artistic patination characterized by an overall medium golden-brown with hints of reddish-oxide undertones, brilliant ochre yellows and contrasting black left in the recesses. The model is signed in a crisp script "J. Moigniez" and is situated over a cove-molded slate base.

Jules Moigniez was born at Senlis, Oise, France on the 28th of May in 1835. His father, a metal gilder, bought a foundry in 1857 in which to cast his son’s sculptures, giving him a significant advantage over his peers both in terms of cost and control. The quality of the work from this foundry is widely acknowledged as being superior in quality and patination. The breadth of patination and their willingness to experiment is evident in their work, including multi-tone chemical patinas, silvered-bronze, gilded patinas as well as the use of very light translucent bronze hues that are particularly unforgiving of foundry flaws. Most works were cast using the lost-wax method and are always chiseled and chased with great skill.

It is perhaps in light of this total control over production that his works have been criticized as being “overly chiseled” and as being complicated with excessive amounts of detail. This is particularly so with his bird subjects, often complete with a variety of extensive foliage in the base.

His passion for studies of birds resulted in some of the finest and most highly developed models of the 19th century, a lifelong interest that was likely born of his study under Paul Comoléra. There are great similarities between the models of the two sculptors, particularly in the handling of feathers and feet; these are exquisitely rendered by both sculptors, with the models by Jules being a development on the earlier work of his tutor.

His first debut was at the age of twenty at the Exposition Universelle in Paris with a plaster model of a Pointer Seizing a Pheasant (1855). He ultimately would exhibit thirty models at Salon between 1859 through 1892 and received a medal at the Great Exhibition of 1862. English and American collectors were particularly interested in his work and many of his game bird subjects were purchased by audiences outside of France, aided at least in part by presenting selected works at the London International Exhibition of 1862. These were important markets for him as an artist; by some estimates more than half of his lifetime production was acquired by collectors in England and Scotland.

Around 1869, Jules Moigniez was stricken with an illness that he would never recover from, ceasing around that time to produce any new models. He tragically took his own life on May 29th of 1894 at the young age of fifty-nine. He was survived by his father, who continued to cast his work personally until his death, after which the foundry and all of the original plasters were acquired by the foundry of Auguste Gouge. These were cast until tastes changed at the time of the First World War.

Artist Listings & Bibliography:

  • Animals in Bronze, Christopher Payne, 2002, p. 184, fig. De6


Measurements: 12 1/8" H x 6 1/2" D x 13" W (total dimensions including base); 11" H x 11" W (bronze)

Condition Report:
Exquisite original condition. Cleaned, waxed and in very fine presentation-ready condition.