IVORY CARVERS OF ALL LANDS AND OF 

 ALL TIMES 



Aarts, a. Sculptor. ExMbited at Brus- 

 sels Exposition. Head of Laughing 

 Child. 



Adye, Thomas. Sculptor. Worked in 

 London in the eighteenth century, 

 and executed small objects in ivory 

 there from 1737 to 1744. 



Agnesius, Jacobus. Born in Calw in 

 Wiirtemberg. His name is signed 

 with the date 1638 on a representation 

 of the martyrdom of St. Bartholomew, 

 now in the Museum of Albi, Italy. 



Albert, . Exhibited spinning wheel 



at Musee Galliera in 1903. 



Algardi, Alessandro. Sculptor. Born 

 in Bologna in 1692; died at Rome, 

 June 10, 1654. Was a pupil of Ludo- 

 vico Caracci and was considered the 

 finest sculptor of the seventeenth 

 century. In ivory his principal works 

 were crucifixes, a splendid example 

 being one attributed to him in the 

 Reiche Kapelle in Munich. 



Alk,\menes, . Executed ivory and gold 



statue of Dionysos Eleutherios. 



Allouard, Henri. Exhibited "Chrysis 

 Victrix" at the Musee Galliera in 

 1903 and a group "La Lecture In- 

 terrompue." In the Salon of 1908 

 he had a statuette, "Les deux amis," 

 of ivory, marble, and stone, and 

 in the Salon of 1909, a statuette 

 of bronze, stone, marble, and ivory, 

 called "Le Gue," and a group en- 

 titled "Colin-Maillard" of marble and 

 ivory. 



Altorf, Johann. Sculptor. Born in the 

 Hague, January 6, 1876. Worked for 

 seven years with the sculptors Alex- 

 andre and Engels. Executed in ivory 

 and in oak figures of elephants, mon- 

 keys, camels, lions, owls, etc.; some- 

 times combining the two materials. 



Andersen, Halvor, sumamed "Halvor 

 the DevU." Made sculptures in ivory 

 at Bragemais in the eighteenth cen- 

 tiu*y. Works by him in the royal 

 Danish collections in Copenhagen. 



Angemair, Christoph. Born in Wal- 

 heim near Munich; died in Mimich in 

 1633. Came at an early age to Mim- 

 ich where he was in the service of 

 Elector Maximilian I until 1631, when 

 he was pensioned. 



Anguier, Michel. Sculptor. Bom in 

 Eu, Normandy, September 28, 1612; 

 died July 11, 1686. Belonged to the 

 Dieppe school of ivory carvers. His 

 principal work was a crucifix for the 

 high altar of the Sorbonne executed in 

 1668. 



Arzt Brothers. Carvers of the Erbach 

 (Odenwald) school in the middle of the 

 eighteenth century. 



Aubert, Pierre. Died before 1408; was 

 hving in Toulouse in 1380. 



Aubert, Jean. Employed by Dukes of 

 Burgundy in the fourteenth century. 



Barbetti, Rafaello. Italian wood and 

 ivory carver. Born in Siena in 1828. 

 Received several medals. 



Barbetti, Rinaldo. Italian wood and 

 ivory carver. Born in Siena in 1830; 

 died in Florence in 1903. 



Barillot, Eugene. Born in Berlin in 

 1841. Ivory and bronze work. "The 

 Pied Piper of Hamelin," "The Trum- 

 peter of Sakkingen," etc. 



Barre, Jean August. Sculptor. Born 

 in Paris, September 25, 1811; died in 

 Paris in 1896. Produced a beautiful 

 ivory statuette of Rachel. Pupil of 

 his father, Jean Jacques Barre. 



Barrias, . Exhibited in Musee Gal- 

 Hera, 1903. " Jeune Fille de Boussada." 



495 



