La Fortune (1894), Collection King Baudouin FoundationLa Brabançonne, Brussels, 1930.
Charles Samuel (29 December 1862, in Brussels – 3 February 1938 or 1939, in Cannes[1]) was a Belgian sculptor, engraver and medalist.
Life
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Samuel was born in Brussels and trained there. He studied engraving with Léopold Wiener, sculpture with Eugène Simonis, Joseph Jaquet and Charles van der Stappen, and medal-making with the goldsmith and sculptor Philippe Wolfers. He began his career in 1889, from his house and workshop in Ixelles, which was the first project of noted Belgian architect Henri Van Dievoet. His work was part of the sculpture event in the art competition at the 1936 Summer Olympics.[2]
His wife was the French pianist Clotilde Kleeberg.
Work
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monument to the novelist Charles De Coster at the Place Flagey in Ixelles, modeled by Neel Doff, 1894
The Lion, Botanical Garden of Brussels, circa 1898
female figuration of La Brabançonne (Belgian national anthem, in French language of female though in Dutch of male grammatical gender), Surlet de Chokier square, Brussels, 1930
J. Ogonovsky, "Samuel, Charles", in J. Van Lennep (ed.), De 19de-eeuwse Belgische beeldhouwkunst, catalogus n.a.v. tentoonstelling G-Bank Brussel 5/10-15/12/1990 (exhibition catalogue), Brussel, 1990, pp. 550–553
Darmon, Adrian M., 2003: Autour de l'art juif: encyclopédie des peintres, photographes et sculpteurs, p. 330, Carnot
Pol Defosse, 2005: Dictionnaire historique de la laïcité en Belgique, p.282, Luc Pire Editions