Owner Comments:
Medal, Plaquette, 1908, Bronze, France. PROFESSEUR EDOUARD QUENU, (1852-1933), Faculte De Medecine de Paris, by Jean Baptiste Auguste Dampt (1854–1945). Size: 71mm x 80mm. Weight: 176 Grams, about 6.2 Oz. Plaque is accompanied by its original fitted case. Designed to honor Quenu, who was a surgeon specializing in operations on the large intestine. He first used sterile gloves for the procedure which of course resulted in saving many lives both in France and around the world. Edge indicates Bronze and is hallmarked. As to the Medallist: Dampt was born in Venarey-les-Laumes as the son of a cabinetmaker, Dampt studied at the École des Beaux-Arts in Dijon, then in 1874 under the leadership of François Jouffroy and Paul Dubois at the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris . He exhibited for the first time at the Salon of the Société des Artistes Français in 1876. In 1877 he took the deuxième Prix de Rome for sculpture at the Ecole. He completed his military service, then organized an Exhibition of the Society of Friends of the Gold Coast to promote art in its region. Dampt's work can be described as Symbolist; at the Musée d'Orsay he is classified as Art Nouveau. Some of Dampt's sculptures are exhibited at the Museum of Fine Arts in Dijon. In 1919 Dampt was appointed to chair #7 of the Académie des Beaux-Arts. Dampt's students include the Americans Frederick Ruckstull, Charles Grafly, and Cyrus Edwin Dallin, and the Swiss Jean Dunand. The animalier François Pompon was an assistant. In 1895, Dampt was a founding member of the arts group Les Cinq, which sought to apply new mechanical methods to furniture design. The four other founding members were architect Tony Selmersheim, designer Felix Aubert, sculptor and craftsman Alexandre Charpentier, and the painter Étienne Moreau-Nélaton. Architect Charles Plummet would join in 1896, changing the group's name first to Les Six and then to L'Art pour tous with the later association of Henri Sauvage and others.