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Auguste HengTorso of a womancirca 1925
circa 1925
$15,249.82
£11,329.55
€12,800
CA$21,144.57
A$22,739.21
CHF 12,158.70
MX$274,228.43
NOK 153,755.09
SEK 140,090.68
DKK 97,557.26
About the Item
Torso of a woman
by Auguste HENG (1891-1968)
Sculpture in pink marble stone
Signed on the base " A. Heng "
Presented on an olive-wood base
France
circa 1925
height 34,5 cm
height with base 41 cm
width 14,2 cm
depth 12,5 cm
Biography
Auguste Heng (1891-1968) was a Swiss sculptor. Member of the Swiss Society of Painters, Sculptors and Architects, he exhibited in Paris at the Salon d'Automne and the Salon des Indépendants.
Participating in André Citroën's famous "black cruise", Heng produced a bust of a woman which became famous, a portrait of Nobosudru who was the favorite of Touba, chief of the Mangbetou tribe in Belgian Congo (Zaire) in the 1920s. At the time, we could see this face and profile everywhere in Paris and in Europe, in particular on the posters of the Pavillon de Marsan Exhibition.
This mythical cruise is recounted by Léon Poirier's film and by numerous events and exhibitions organized on the return from the expedition in 1926. Naturalist sculptures presenting each tribe or region were made by Western artists such as Guillaume Laplagne and Auguste Heng.

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