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  1. Antoine-Louis Barye (24 de septiembre de 1795 - 25 de junio de 1875) fue un escultor del romanticismo realista francés . Biografía. Hijo de un orfebre, en el taller de su padre adquirió el gusto por el detalle. Fue además discípulo de François Joseph Bosio y Antoine-Jean Gros, ingresó en la École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts en 1818.

    • Francesa
  2. Antoine-Louis Barye (24 September 1795 – 25 June 1875) was a Romantic French sculptor most famous for his work as an animalier, a sculptor of animals. His son and student was the known sculptor Alfred Barye . Biography. Born in Paris, France, Barye began his career as a goldsmith, like many sculptors of the Romantic Period .

    • 25 June 1875, (aged 79)
    • Sculptor
  3. Antoine-Louis Barye (born September 24, 1795, Paris, France—died June 25, 1875, Paris) was a prolific French sculptor, painter, and printmaker whose subject was primarily animals. He is known as the father of the modern Animalier school.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BaryeBarye - Wikipedia

    English Engineering units. 1.450377 × 10 −5 psi. The barye (symbol: Ba), or sometimes barad, barrie, bary, baryd, baryed, or barie, is the centimetre–gram–second (CGS) unit of pressure. It is equal to 1 dyne per square centimetre. [1] 1 Ba = 0.1 Pa = 10−6 bar = 10−4 pieze = 0.1 N / m 2 = 1 g⋅cm−1⋅s−2.

    • 0.1 Pa
    • Pressure
  5. Biography. Antoine-Louis Barye was the leading sculptor in the French group of artists known as Les Animaliers. The term was originally meant as an insult, mocking the small scale and “secondary” subject matter of Barye’s animal sculptures, but he and his contemporaries happily adopted the term.

    • June 25, 1875
  6. The Collection. European Paintings. Tiger in Repose. Antoine-Louis Barye French. ca. 1850–65. On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 801. This tiger, relaxed yet alert, is based on animals that Barye saw at the menagerie of the Jardin des Plantes in Paris, where he often drew from the 1820s onward, sometimes in the company of Delacroix.

  7. A slideshow of artworks auto-selected from multiple collections. 'Sculptor Antoine-Louis Barye posed the animals in contradiction to their natures: the light-footed gnu, whose delicate legs skip over rough surfaces, here is brought to the ground, while the snake, whose lack of legs naturally forces him to shimmy along the ground, strikes the gnu's throat in mid-air.