Pate sur Pate
selected from amongst the most promising youths
PATE SUR PATE. BY M. L. wn0 attended his public classes. I joined early
SOLON. the small group of congenial spirits he had
May a craftsman-more accustomed gathered together and to whom he supplied, with
to ply the china tools than the pen-be disinterestedness, his good advice and the life
excused if he venture to jot down in his own words model His was a most unconventional and
a few notes upon a decorative process he has prac- '"regular where the rule was that every one
tised for thirty-five years, and which he hopes to should be free to follow his own impulse and en-
.. „c v,P ,v snared to deavour to strike out for himself a path of his
continue to practise as long as he is spareu iu _ v
, „ own. We were all anxious to learn, all full of
work ?
Pite sur Pate undoubtedly lends itself to artistic lofty aspirations, and of bright hopes with regard
treatment yet very few painters or sculptors-with to the future, but none of us, as far as I can
the exception of the talented artists on the staff of remember, was much encumbered with this world's
the manufactory of Sevres-have resorted to it for goods. Notwithstanding this last disadvantage,
the rendering of original conceptions. I do not not a few of our small brotherhood have made
mean to enter into the vindication of its capabilities, their mark in art, each in a way very different from
but I cannot refrain from recording here my in- the rest. Alphonse Legros, Fantin, the Regameys,
debtedness to a process from which I have derived L'hermite, Cazin, and many others less known in
so much satisfaction, and which, moreover, has England, were amongst those I am proud to
permitted me to exist—always doing factory work remember as my friends at the " Atelier Lecoq."
—with perhaps a little more comfort than falls But while all my fellow-workers were preparing for
generally to the lot of a factory hand. the higher contest of the annual "Salon," I felt
How it came to pass that, early in life, after a drawn by natural disposition towards decorative
course of desultory and aimless studies, I happened and applied art. I was found more often studying
to find at last, a direct application for the little Greek vases and terra-cottas than pictures, and the
knowledge of drawing I had managed to acquire, Cluny Museum had to me as great an attraction as
may perhaps be of some interest to my brother the Louvre.
craftsmen Many were the sketches I made of imaginary
M. Lecoq de Boisbaudrant, professor at the masterpieces to be executed in marble, bronze,
Elementary School of Design in Paris, had opened precious metal; all of them declared, when sub-
a private studio, in which the students had been mitted to competent judges, to be as impracticable
II. No. 10.—January, 1894. II7
selected from amongst the most promising youths
PATE SUR PATE. BY M. L. wn0 attended his public classes. I joined early
SOLON. the small group of congenial spirits he had
May a craftsman-more accustomed gathered together and to whom he supplied, with
to ply the china tools than the pen-be disinterestedness, his good advice and the life
excused if he venture to jot down in his own words model His was a most unconventional and
a few notes upon a decorative process he has prac- '"regular where the rule was that every one
tised for thirty-five years, and which he hopes to should be free to follow his own impulse and en-
.. „c v,P ,v snared to deavour to strike out for himself a path of his
continue to practise as long as he is spareu iu _ v
, „ own. We were all anxious to learn, all full of
work ?
Pite sur Pate undoubtedly lends itself to artistic lofty aspirations, and of bright hopes with regard
treatment yet very few painters or sculptors-with to the future, but none of us, as far as I can
the exception of the talented artists on the staff of remember, was much encumbered with this world's
the manufactory of Sevres-have resorted to it for goods. Notwithstanding this last disadvantage,
the rendering of original conceptions. I do not not a few of our small brotherhood have made
mean to enter into the vindication of its capabilities, their mark in art, each in a way very different from
but I cannot refrain from recording here my in- the rest. Alphonse Legros, Fantin, the Regameys,
debtedness to a process from which I have derived L'hermite, Cazin, and many others less known in
so much satisfaction, and which, moreover, has England, were amongst those I am proud to
permitted me to exist—always doing factory work remember as my friends at the " Atelier Lecoq."
—with perhaps a little more comfort than falls But while all my fellow-workers were preparing for
generally to the lot of a factory hand. the higher contest of the annual "Salon," I felt
How it came to pass that, early in life, after a drawn by natural disposition towards decorative
course of desultory and aimless studies, I happened and applied art. I was found more often studying
to find at last, a direct application for the little Greek vases and terra-cottas than pictures, and the
knowledge of drawing I had managed to acquire, Cluny Museum had to me as great an attraction as
may perhaps be of some interest to my brother the Louvre.
craftsmen Many were the sketches I made of imaginary
M. Lecoq de Boisbaudrant, professor at the masterpieces to be executed in marble, bronze,
Elementary School of Design in Paris, had opened precious metal; all of them declared, when sub-
a private studio, in which the students had been mitted to competent judges, to be as impracticable
II. No. 10.—January, 1894. II7