Jean Baptiste Carpeaux (1827-1875)
Get a Carpeaux Certificate of Authenticity for your painting or a COA for your Carpeaux drawing or sculpture.
For all your Carpeaux artworks you need a Certificate of Authenticity in order to sell, to insure or to donate for a tax deduction.
How to get a Carpeaux Certificate of Authenticity is easy. Just send us photos and dimensions and tell us what you know about the origin or history of your Carpeaux painting, drawing or sculpture.
If you want to sell your Carpeaux painting, drawing or sculpture use our selling services. We offer Carpeaux selling help, selling advice, private treaty sales and full brokerage.
We have been authenticating Carpeaux and issuing certificates of authenticity since 2002. We are recognized Carpeaux experts and Carpeaux certified appraisers. We issue COAs and appraisals for all Carpeaux artworks.
Our Carpeaux paintings, drawings and sculptures authentications are accepted and respected worldwide.
Each COA is backed by in-depth research and analysis authentication reports.
The Carpeaux certificates of authenticity we issue are based on solid, reliable and fully referenced art investigations, authentication research, analytical work and forensic studies.
We are available to examine your Carpeaux painting, drawing or sculpture anywhere in the world.
You will generally receive your certificates of authenticity and authentication report within two weeks. Some complicated cases with difficult to research Carpeaux paintings, drawings or sculpture take longer.
Our clients include Carpeaux collectors, investors, tax authorities, insurance adjusters, appraisers, valuers, auctioneers, Federal agencies and many law firms.
We perform Jean Baptiste Carpeaux art authentication, appraisal, certificates of authenticity (COA), analysis, research, scientific tests, full art authentications. We will help you sell your Jean Baptiste Carpeaux or we will sell it for you.
Jean Baptiste Carpeaux was a French Realist sculptor and painter. He was said to have been the leading French sculptor of his time, and that his work created a new variety of Romantic Classicism. Carpeaux was the son of a brick layer, and as a young man, he worked as a messenger. He moved to Paris in 1838 and studied at the Petite Ecole at the age of 11. In 1848, he entered the Ecole des Beaux-Arts where he studied under Romantic sculptor Francois Rude. He won the Prix de Rome in 1854, which allowed him to travel to Italy. There, Carpeaux was able to study the works of Renaissance artists such as Michelangelo.
Though he became a talented sculptor, specializing in busts and statues of mythological figures, he also created a number of paintings and sketches.
In 1860, he created his sculpture “Ugolino and his Sons,” which was unlike that of most other classical sculpture of its day. It emphasized extreme emotion and physical states, which was a direct contrast to the calmness of classical sculpture. This piece catapulted Carpeaux into being the foremost sculptor of his time.
Carpeaux returned to Paris in 1862, and resumed creating busts; but this time it was for famous clients such as Napoleon. It is said that his use of deep shadow was an influence on the young Rodin, who would become one of the most famous sculptors of all time. Today his work is housed all over the world including at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Brooklyn Museum in New York, as well as the Musée des Beaux-Arts and the National Gallery in Washington, D.C. Still wondering about a bust or statue in your family estate? Contact us…it could be by Jean Baptiste Carpeaux.
Reviews
1,217 global ratings
5 Star
4 Star
3 Star
2 Star
1 Star
Your evaluation is very important to us. Thank you.