Antoinette Gensoul-Desfonts
Marguerite-Antoinette Painclair, known professionally as Antoinette Gensoul-Desfonds (c.1769–1824), was a pioneering French sculptor who exhibited at the Paris Salon during the French Revolutionary Period.
Life
Marguerite-Antoinette Painclair was born around 1769. She received her artistic training in London, studying with Agostino Carlini, an Italian sculptor of the Royal Academy.[1][2] Later, she married fellow artist Jean-Louis-Basile Gensoul, a student of Jean-Baptiste Regnault.[1][3]
Gensoul-Desfonts was a committed supporter of Revolutionary and Republican ideals. Her sympathies are reflected in the works she exhibited at the 1793 Paris Salon, which included a proposed monument celebrating Liberty and the triumph of Law, Philosophy, and Charity over Despotism, as well as a terracotta sculpture of the revolutionary martyr Michel Le Peletier. The couple's son, born that year, was named Brutus, evoking the Roman figure celebrated for defending the Republic against tyranny.[4]
During the early years of the French Revolution, Gensoul-Desfonts took part in efforts by artists to defend their professional autonomy and secure fair access to state support, signing petitions that challenged secret appointments and called for greater transparency in the governance of the arts.[5]
Gensoul-Desfonts maintained her studio on Paris's Left Bank, first on the rue des Cordeliers and then on the rue de Vaugirard, before later moving to the northeast of the city on the rue de Bondi.[6][7][2]
She exhibited at the Paris Salon between 1791 and 1799, after which no artistic activity is recorded. Subsequently, she moved to the village of Connaux in the Gard district, where she died on 16 October 1824 at her home.[1]
Works
Antoinette Gensoul-Desfonts was primarily a sculptor and relief artist, producing allegorical works and intimate genre scenes in terracotta. She belonged to the first generation of women sculptors in France to work on state commissions for public or semi-public spaces, a pioneering cohort which also included Marie-Anne Collot, Julie Charpentier, Félicie de Fauveau, and Marie d’Orléans.[8] In 1792, Gensoul-Desfonts received a commission to create reliefs for a planned column to be erected on the ruins of the Bastille. The plaster model for the column was exhibited at the 1793 Paris Salon.[9][7]
Another of Antoinette's works shown that year, Michel Le Peletier, on his deathbed, writing his final words, was likely a sketch model created for the National Convention’s competition for a marble monument to Le Peletier, launched that January.[10] Neither project was ultimately carried forward.
A terracotta sketch of Le Peletier on his deathbed, held by the Musée Carnavalet, has been tentatively attributed by scholar Suzanne Glover Lindsay to Gensoul-Desfonts.[11] However, the inscription does not match a known example of her handwriting.[4]
The names of a number of works by Gensoul-Desfonts are known from catalogues of the Paris Salon.
Paris Salon
| Year | Work | English translation |
|---|---|---|
| 1791 | Groupe allégorique en terre cuite [6] | Allegorical Group in Terracotta |
| 1793 | Projet de colonne triomphale pour être placée sur les ruines de la Bastille | Project for a triumphal column to be erected on the ruins of the Bastille |
| Un Africain mordu par un serpent | An African Man Bitten by a Snake | |
| Michel Le Peletier, sur son lit de mort, écrivant ses dernières paroles [7] | Michel Le Peletier, on his deathbed, writing his final words | |
| 1796 | La Captivité comptait les heures [2] | Captivity was counting the Hours |
| L’Amour qui vient la visiter les couvre d’un voile [2] | Love, coming to visit her, covers her with a veil | |
| 1799 | Le Goûter de Philis et de Daphnis | The Afternoon Snack of Phyllis and Daphnis |
| Portrait de femme ayant une lettre à la main | Portrait of a Woman Holding a Letter in Her Hand | |
| Une laitière portant son lait au marché | A Milkmaid Carrying Her Milk to the Market | |
| Une jeune fille parlant à un jeune homme à la fenêtre [12][13] | A Young Woman Speaking to a Young Man at the Window |
References
- ^ a b c Painclair, Marguerite-Antoinette (1824-10-17). "Death certificate".
- ^ a b c d "Paris salons of 1796 and 1797". Salon: 60 v. 1977.
- ^ Thieme, Ulrich (1907). Allgemeines Lexikon der bildenden Kunstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart (in German). Harold B. Lee Library. Seemann.
- ^ a b "Antoinette Painclair, épouse Gensoul-Desfonds". galerieterrades.fr. Retrieved 2025-12-27.
- ^ Collection de documents inédits sur l'histoire de France (in French). Imprimerie nationale. 1891.
- ^ a b "Paris salons of 1785, 1787, 1789 and 1791". Salon: 60 v. 1977.
- ^ a b c "Explication des ouvrages de peinture et dessins, sculpture, architecture et gravure des artistes vivans..." Gallica. 1793. Retrieved 2025-12-27.
- ^ Sterckx, Marjan (2011-04-19). "La participation des femmes sculpteurs à la sculpture publique à Paris au Second Empire".
- ^ Sofio, Séverine (2016-05-12). Artistes femmes. Parenthèse enchantée XVIII - XIXe siècle (in French). CNRS editions. ISBN 978-2-271-09218-2.
- ^ "Le Peletier de Saint-Fargeau, Louis-Michel (1760-1793), sur son lit de mort". www.carnavalet.paris.fr (in French). 2026-01-03. Retrieved 2025-12-28.
- ^ Lindsay, SuzanneGlover (2017-07-05). Funerary Arts and Tomb Cult: "Living with the Dead in France, 1750?870 ". Routledge. ISBN 978-1-351-56616-2.
- ^ "Explication des ouvrages de peinture et dessins, sculpture, architecture et gravure des artistes vivans..." Gallica. 1799. Retrieved 2025-12-27.
- ^ Dictionnaire critique et documentaire des peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs et graveurs de tous les temps et de tous les pays. Internet Archive. 1999. ISBN 978-2-7000-3010-5.
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