Ernest Wijnants Belgian, 1878-1964

Overview

Born in Mechelen, a famous center for furniture making, Wijnants began his career in this local industry. Furnished with this foundation in carving, he followed his ambition to become an independent artist by enrolling in the Mechelen Academy of Fine Art and later in the Brussels Academy where he studied under Charles Van der Stappen.  At the 1913 World Fair in Ghent Wijnants exhibited Echo, his first work to show a truly original style which combines something of the modernism of George Minne with a delicacy of line and concentration on the feminine beauty of his model.  This genre continued with the series of nudes he made for Frédéric Speth in which the range of his inspiration from classical Greek sculpture to European Gothic becomes ever more apparent.  Through the 1920s and 1930s Wijnants established himself as one of the prime exponents of Belgian sculpture, leading to teaching positions in Antwerp, and, in 1938, was awarded the State prize for Sculpture and the Plastic Arts.

Awards

Price Edmond Picard (1926)

Grand Prize of the Plastic Arts (1938)

Museums and Public Collections

Museum Europeu d’Art Modern, Barcelona

Galerie Mullendorf, Brussels

Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent

Galerie Maurice Tzwern

Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp

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