Welcome to my Blog
This is a place where the visitors are confronted with their search for a personal touch and where they have an opportunity to get acquainted with a skilled expert, who has turned durability and tradition into a personal passion.
I hope this will become a valued and rich source of inspiration and knowledge. Please Leave comments and enjoy your visit. Please note text and pictures on this blog are Copyright protected.

Showing posts with label Switzerland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Switzerland. Show all posts

Wednesday, 8 July 2015

Cornielje family coat of arms carved in wood | Carved Family coat of arms | CARVED FAMILY CREST IN LIMEWOOD

Carved family coat of arms

Cornielje family coat of arms carved in wood / Cornielje Family – Switzerland
Heraldic coat of arms in wood.
_____________________
_______________________

Heraldic family coat of arms carved in wood is one of my favorite specialties.  It is always a personal challenge to be able to carve a family coat of arms in wood. Heraldry is a very interesting topic and I am always happy and excited to have the chance to begin a new assignment for a heraldic coat of arms.
You get to know interesting people when you are learning about “their” fascinating family history. And for me –personally-, it is always nice to hear that they appreciate my craftsmanship and quality.
Every heraldic coat of arms is unique. Usually it will start with an example of the inspiration in the form of a drawing, sketch or and old photography, provided by the customer. 


In some cases, there is always the possibility that the design cannot be used as a blueprint for carving the coat of arms. That may be because the design is too small, while the customer desires a bigger heraldic panel. In that case, the coat of arms has to be re-designed.  If you simply scale up a small design, the proportions cannot be maintained.  Usually, the composition must be completed in order to exploit in a better way the spatial layout.

It may be that there is no logic in building, in the assembling of the mantling or lambrequin, and it also happens that the original heraldic design was never intended to be carved in wood. After all, wood has its limitations.

Another important thing is that the relief fits the dimensions of the coat of arms. These small and sometimes even bigger problems you will encounter and you will need to solve them working together with your customer.




Cornielje coat of arms
Gerard Cornielje –the customer- thru his paternal side, is a descendant of the Baroness Marie Le Pesant of Bois-Guilbert and the Lawyer Pierre Corneille, patents of the poets Pierre Corneille Seigneur D’Anville and Thomas Corneille Seigneur de L’Isle.
The old Pierre Corneille (not without the help of his son, whose work “Le Cid” created commotion in the year 1637) was knighted by King Louis XIII in the year 1637 and renewed knighted in 1669 by Louis XIV, after the revocation of his original credentials.
(Probably under political pressure from Cardinal Richelieu, “Le Cid” was found morally reprehensible and Richelieu became jealous of the sudden fame of his former protégé.

Carved Family coat of arms

The full title of Pierre Corneille “the younger” was Ecuyer (nl) Esquire) Pierre Corneille Seigneur d’Anville, a transferable title associated with land ownership and a fixed annual income.
The title Ecuyer was changed after the death of his father, into Chevalier (nl) Knight.
During the French Revolution in 1789, the noble family Corneille fled to the north and the family took refuge in the Netherlands, the rest of the family spread across Germany, Austria and Bohemia.

The name Corneille changed over the years to Cornielje, probably an adaptation; it was a common French use to change, to “Ducherize” or to “Germanize” a name, but also for the fear of the long arm of the revolution.
From the maternal side is Baron von Saxen from the branch Hippmann von Sachsen zu Bohemen. The origin of the nobility lies here in the year 1733 by Johann Paul von Sachsen Hippmann, because of his efforts in the service to the kingdom of Bohemia, elevated to Baron.

Cornielje coat of arms



Here an image of our new coat of arms (notice the references to our original coat of arms being the red lion and the star) as well as the blazoning of our armorial bearings:

Blazoning of the heraldic achievement of the Cornielje family:


Shield:- Sable, between two wings Argent displayed a rose Argent, seeded Or, barbed Vert, between the primary feathers a coronet of twelve points (five and two halves visible) Or pearls proper and in base a star of six points Argent.

Crest:- a demi lion rampant Gules holding between the claws a lyre of five strings the outer being paint brushes and the central being a snake Argent the soundbox charged with five mullets Sable.

Mantling:- Sable doubled Argent and Gules doubled Or.


Right of bearing: Gerardus Wilhelmus Theodorus Cornielje, author, hipster * ‘s-Heerenberg/Niederlande 12.6.1962, his fiancée Rachel Naomi Ben-Dror, dolphin-trainer, officemanager, * Eilat/Israel 26.8.1981, his succession of both gender born in wedlock, as well as all descendants of his father Gerhard Everhard Cornielje (1926-2001), provided that they bear the last name Cornielje.

Translation : Lis alvarado

 Cornielje family coat of arms carved in wood

______________________

_______________

CARVED FAMILY CREST IN LIMEWOOD, modeling





CARVED FAMILY CREST IN LIMEWOOD, finished

 CARVED FAMILY CREST IN LIMEWOOD

Carved Family coat of arms in wood

https://www.patrickdamiaens.info
 
link FB PAGE

 

Wednesday, 11 September 2013

JEAN DÉMONTREUIL | French woodcarver | 18th century style wood carving | Aubert Parent Style of Carving




The Historisches Musem in Basel

Jean Démontreuil




I would like to offer you the opportunity to get acquainted with the work of Jean Démontreuil, a French woodcarver who practised his trade in the same period as his compatriot Aubert-Henri-Joseph Parent.  (18th century style of carving)
Both woodcarvers had something in common, that is to say both of them were specialized in very subtle carving and both men shared a passion for birds.

We’ve already discussed Aubert Parent in my Dutch Woodcarving blog (Ornamentsnijder), referring to 5 magnificent pieces of his, which are on display at the “Historisches Museum” in Basel. 
This Museum is also in the possession of two pieces of Jean Démontreuil, who has remained a fairly unrecognized woodcarver, but undeservedly so. 

That is why I want to take this opportunity to show you some of his sublime work. The full-scale carving was presumably executed in limewood and represents a dead bird, “Le Serin” (European canary) and “L'hirondelle” (swallow) both dated and signed 1796. The two small panels in the Historisches Museum basel are two different bequests/legacies from families from Basel and became this way a part of the regular collection.

It is only known that Daniel Burckhardt-Wildt, a rich and well known art collector from Basel bought the carving "serin mort" from a Mr. Dienast, who just came from Paris, on April 20th 1796. So the work came to Basel the same year it was carved.

Jean Démontreuil
  
Jean Démontreuil, a.k.a. Montreuil , born in Bordeaux, France. “Professeur à l'Académie de Bordeaux”. He exhibited his work at the “Salon de Paris” from 1791 till 1798 and must certainly have been familiar with the work of Aubert Parent, who also had various exhibits in Paris (1779 -1783). At the Louvre, it’s also possible to admire one of Démontreuil’s pieces.

On 27 June 2008, a piece of Jean Démontreuil was offered to auction house Delvaux in Paris. The object was described as finely carved and was dated and signed 1791.  

Jean Démontreuil, Swallow Carved in 1796


Jean Démontreuil, 'Le Serin Mort' (European canary)





             
The Historisches Museum Basel,
Switserland   
                                  
       WEBSITE  





 
https://www.patrickdamiaens.info