Sunday, February 10, 2019

The most perfect, perfected gentleman - male mannequins by Pierre Imans, circa 1930-40


During this period, the company began making figures without the glass eyes and with molded hair. They were nonetheless often just as full of character.

In 1896 the Dutch-born Imans began producing unconventional, naturalistic mannequins in wax. He had studied with the sculptor Ludovic Durand, one of the chief modelers at the Musée Grévin, the hugely popular waxwork museum in Paris which had opened to the public in the 1880s. But with his own figures, Imans was keen to distance himself from the sort of waxwork grotesques one would encounter at the Musée Grévin; he considered himself not a wax modeler but a sculptor, a statuaire céroplasticien or "ceroplastician".

This figure and the next look to be taken from the same mold, but this one has the full eye and hair treatment, while the next is merely molded.

His figures - male and female - were given carefully painted faces, hair and eyebrows and eyelashes, glass eyes, and sometimes even teeth. What is more, he often gave them names, and in his elegant marketing catalog photographs they were styled to look like glamorous celebrities. Imans refused to call his wax figures "mannequins." He purged the word from his promotional vocabulary and described his figures simply as Les Cires de Pierre Imans, "The waxes of Pierre Imans".


Besides their obvious cost to produce, these wax figures were both very heavy and quite delicate; the hands were especially prone to damage. So, from the Twenties, new wax-like materials such as cérolaque and carnasine - a light plaster composite, a mixture of plaster and gelatine - were introduced to produce mannequins that were lighter and less fragile.


I've been unable to find a single thing about Imans beyond his country of origin. Not his date of birth or death. He started his business in 1896 and it looks like it was still functioning into the Fifties and maybe later. 10 rue Crussol, in the eleventh arrondissement of Paris, the business address included on all these images, is today the location of a vintage dress shop. Which seems rather appropriate, actually. Imans' surviving work can be found in museums around the world, considered important examples of modern sculpture... just as Imans believed it to be.


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The cover of an Imans brochure, circa 1930.
 The Imans showroom at 16-18 Boulevard Haussmann, Paris, circa 1929.
16-18 Boulevard Haussmann today.
I haven't been able to find any period images of 10 rue (de) Crussol, but this is the location today.
Sculptor Clovis Trouille (foreground) and others in the Imans workroom, circa 1920s. Trouille apparently worked for the Imans company for forty-five years.



13 comments:

  1. This is amazing. You are an incredible sleuth! Thanks.

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    1. "Sleuth"! Now that's a compliment I treasure! : )

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  2. I agree - this is incredible; another forgotten artist that deserves a renaissance. Thank you, Stephen! Also, you might know that the Clovis Trouille that worked for Imans, was this Clovis Trouille - http://weimarart.blogspot.com/2010/11/clovis-trouille-angel-of-bad-taste.html. He also has a brief Wikipedia page: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clovis_Trouille

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    1. Wow! Thank you so much for sharing these links. I had no idea. As an artist he was a TRUE original. : )

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  3. A wonderful post. Thank you for your research and sharing of this.

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  4. Marsha!--Marsha!--Marsha!--Marsha!
    Marsha!--Marsha!--Marsha!--Marsha!

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    1. Okay.... I have no idea what the comment signifies - a "Brady Bunch" reference? - but it doesn't appear to be obviously insulting, so I'll share it! ; )

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  5. I'm wondering were they modeled from real people? This is so fascinating and yet no information about the artist, so weird

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    1. Some appear to be almost portraits, so I'm guessing that some of them must have been. And, yes, it was - most - frustrating trying to get any information for this post....

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  6. Is there a documentary on Imans? There should be!

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    1. I don't know if there is one. Yes, there definitely should be!

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  7. I am trying to find a reference work of Imans’ output. I am a museum docent and would like to learn what I can about our manikins. Are you aware of a comprehensive work? Actually, any info about any book would be appreciated.
    Reilly@ak.net

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    1. I don't know of any book on Imans; I wish I did! It was so difficult finding even the tiny shreds of information I shared here. Unfortunately, at this remove, I don't really recall where I gleaned what I did find. Google searches in English and French were made, certainly. Reverse image searches leading to any information from museum collections. It's possible there has been more information made available online since I posted this five years ago. Sorry I'm not more help.

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