Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse had been a student of…
October 1875 CE
Albert-Ernest Carrier-Belleuse had been a student of David d'Angers and briefly at the École des Beaux-Arts.
His career is distinguished by his versatility and his work outside France: in England between 1850 and 1855 (working for Mintons), and in Brussels around 1871.
His name is perhaps best known because Auguste Rodin had worked as his assistant between 1864 and 1870.
The two had traveled to Brussels in 1871, and by some accounts Rodin assisted Carrier-Belleuse's architectural sculpture for the Brussels Stock Exchange.
Dismissed by Carrier-Belleuse after assisting him on the “Caryatides” of the new Bourse, Rodin collaborates on the execution of decorative bronzes; his companion Rose Beuret has joined him in Brussels.
At the age of thity-five, Rodin has yet to develop a personally expressive style because of the pressures of the decorative work.
A journey to Italy in 1875 provides him with the shock that stimulates his genius.
He visits Genoa, Florence, Rome, Naples, and Venice before returning to Brussels, rescued from the academicism of his working experience by he inspiration of Michelangelo and Donatello.