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Émile Gallé

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Occupation
  
Glass artist

Name
  
Emile Galle


Role
  
Artist

Parents
  
Charles Galle

Emile Galle Gall Emile Furniture Design 19001910 The Red List

Born
  
8 May 1846
Nancy, France

Died
  
September 23, 1904, Nancy, France

Books
  
Dreams Into Glass, Galle, Emile Galle

Art nouveau vases in glass by emile galle


Émile Gallé (8 May 1846 in Nancy – 23 September 1904 in Nancy) was a French artist who worked in glass, and is considered to be one of the major forces in the French Art Nouveau movement.

Contents

Émile Gallé 10 Best images about GlassEmile galle on Pinterest Glass vase

Antique 20thc art nouveau emile galle maple leaves cameo glass vase c 1900


Biography

Émile Gallé 17 images about Galle on Pinterest Antique glass Glass vase and

Gallé was the son of a faience and furniture manufacturer and studied philosophy, botany, and drawing in his youth. He later learned glassmaking at Meisenthal and came to work at his father's factory in Nancy following the Franco-Prussian War. His early work was executed using clear glass decorated with enamel, but he soon turned to an original style featuring heavy, opaque glass carved or etched with plant motifs, often in two or more colours as cameo glass. His friend and patron Robert de Montesquiou sent him to Bayreuth with a recommendation to Cosima Wagner, which led to a great enthusiasm for Parsifal. In 1875, he married Henriette Grimm (1848-1914). In 1877, he then assumed his father’s role as director of the Maison Gallé-Reinemer. In that same year, he was elected Secretary-General for the Société centrale d’horticulture de Nancy. His career took off after his work received praise at the Paris Exhibition of 1878.

Émile Gallé 17 images about Emile Gall 18461904 on Pinterest Auction

Within a decade of another successful showing at the Paris Exhibition of 1889, Gallé had reached international fame and his style, with its emphasis on naturalism and floral motifs, was at the forefront of the emerging Art Nouveau movement.

Émile Gallé Emile Gall 18461904

He continued to incorporate experimental techniques into his work, such as metallic foils and air bubbles, and also revitalized the glass industry by establishing a workshop to mass-produce his, and other artists', designs. The factory would employ 300 workers and artisans at its height, including the notable glassmaker Eugène Rosseau, and remained in operation until 1936.

Émile Gallé Emile Gall 18461904

Gallé wrote a book on art entitled Écrits pour l'art 1884-89 ("Writings on Art 1884-89"), which was published posthumously in 1908.

Émile Gallé FileMEN Emile Galle Rose de France 24032013 1jpg Wikimedia Commons

What is less well-known is Gallé's social engagement. He was a convinced humanist, and was involved in organizing evening schools for the working class (l’Université populaire de Nancy). He was treasurer of the Nancy branch of the Human Rights League of France and in 1898, at great risk for his business, one of the first to become actively involved in the defence of Alfred Dreyfus. He also publicly defended the Romanian Jews and spoke up in defence of the Irish Catholics against Britain, supporting William O’Brien, one of the leaders of the Irish revolt.

Émile Gallé Emile Gall 18461904

In 1901, together with Victor Prouvé, Louis Majorelle, Antonin Daum and Eugène Vallin, he founded an Art Nouveau movement known as École de Nancy (The Nancy School). Many of Gallé works are kept at the Musée de l'École de Nancy.

Émile Gallé httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons22

Émile Gallé 78 images about Emile Galle Pottery on Pinterest Glass vase

References

Émile Gallé Wikipedia