Null Vincent Alfred Acadie dit BARON (1820-1892)
Jean-Gaspard Deburau (1797-1847…
Description

Vincent Alfred Acadie dit BARON (1820-1892) Jean-Gaspard Deburau (1797-1847) A medallion in plaster - A medallion in bronze The first one bears the inscription " JG DEBUREAU born on July 21, 1796. Died in Paris on June 18, 1846" on the rim. The second one bears the inscription " J.G. DEBUREAU. Born in Newkolm (Bohemia) on July 31st 1796. Died in Paris on June 18, 1846" on the circumference and the mark of the founder on the garment "cast by Boyer. rue du chemin vert 37". Diam. Plaster : 65 cm Diam. Bronze : 63 cm Provenance: Succession Deburau, Hôtel des ventes d'Évreux, 28 June 2015, n° 220 to 223. Exhibition: Paris, Salon de 1849, no. 2102, "Idem [Portrait] de feu Deburau" (the handwritten entry register indicates "1 plaster medallion" for the portrait of Jean-Gaspard Deburau. Jean-Gaspard Deburau was a mime who played at the Théâtre des Funambules from 1820 until his death. It is in the role of Pierrot that he plays in a romantic spirit that he becomes famous. He was then the star of the whole of Paris. When he died in 1846, his son Jean Charles took over. Vincent-Alfred Baron was both a sculptor and an actor. He entered the École des Beaux-Arts in 1837 and exhibited at the Salon between 1849 and 1861. During this period, he entered various Parisian theaters such as the Odeon, the Ambigu, the Gaité or the Porte Saint-Martin where he became the head of equipment. It was during his first participation in the Salon of 1849 that he exhibited the plaster medallion representing Jean-Gaspard Deburau.

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Vincent Alfred Acadie dit BARON (1820-1892) Jean-Gaspard Deburau (1797-1847) A medallion in plaster - A medallion in bronze The first one bears the inscription " JG DEBUREAU born on July 21, 1796. Died in Paris on June 18, 1846" on the rim. The second one bears the inscription " J.G. DEBUREAU. Born in Newkolm (Bohemia) on July 31st 1796. Died in Paris on June 18, 1846" on the circumference and the mark of the founder on the garment "cast by Boyer. rue du chemin vert 37". Diam. Plaster : 65 cm Diam. Bronze : 63 cm Provenance: Succession Deburau, Hôtel des ventes d'Évreux, 28 June 2015, n° 220 to 223. Exhibition: Paris, Salon de 1849, no. 2102, "Idem [Portrait] de feu Deburau" (the handwritten entry register indicates "1 plaster medallion" for the portrait of Jean-Gaspard Deburau. Jean-Gaspard Deburau was a mime who played at the Théâtre des Funambules from 1820 until his death. It is in the role of Pierrot that he plays in a romantic spirit that he becomes famous. He was then the star of the whole of Paris. When he died in 1846, his son Jean Charles took over. Vincent-Alfred Baron was both a sculptor and an actor. He entered the École des Beaux-Arts in 1837 and exhibited at the Salon between 1849 and 1861. During this period, he entered various Parisian theaters such as the Odeon, the Ambigu, the Gaité or the Porte Saint-Martin where he became the head of equipment. It was during his first participation in the Salon of 1849 that he exhibited the plaster medallion representing Jean-Gaspard Deburau.

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TAILLEVENT (Guillaume Tirel, dit): Le Viandier de Guillaume TIREL dit Taillevent, enfant de cuisine de la Reine Jeanne d'Evreux, (...). Publié sur le manuscrit de la Bibliothèque nationale (...) par le baron Jérôme PICHON, et Georges VICAIRE (...) . Paris, Techener, 1892. Bound with: PICHON (Jérôme) and VICAIRE (Georges): Le Manuscrit de la Bibliothèque vaticane, supplément au Viandier de Taillevent. One volume. 15 by 23 cm. Both volumes continuously paginated. Frontispiece-(8)-LXVIII-300 pages. 10 hors-texte plates with frontispiece (complete). Full modern anthracite morocco, 5-rib spine, covers preserved. Binding signed D'HERVE. Very good condition. The covers are preserved, stained and restored. Two leaves with foxing, one leaf with a small tear restored, the title page of the supplement slightly browned. A bookplate torn from the title page of the first work. Despite these defects, a good copy. Limited edition of 350 copies. Ours is one of 300 on Marais vellum (N°230). Enriched with a signed autograph letter from Georges VICAIRE to his friend J. B. PONCET. Le Viandier is a French recipe book from the late Middle Ages (late 14th century), associated with the name of Guillaume Tirel, known as Taillevent, master chef to the French kings Charles V and Charles VI. The oldest known manuscript, that of Sion, from the 13th century, proves that it actually predates him. It is a reworking of an even earlier work on the "art of the violin maker". In the middle of the 16th century, the viandier was still a tradesman, involved in running and supplying a food store, selling and supplying often wholesale, sometimes retail, to his customers and buying from a collection network, managing a precious stock of consumable foodstuffs. He may be self-employed, or an employee of a company for whom he is responsible. The word "meat" is used in the ancient sense of the classical Latin word, vivenda, meaning food, various kinds of nourishment, provisions for the mouth, food in general. (Wikipedia)