Henri Boncquet
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Henri Boncquet | |
|---|---|
| Born | 7 April 1868 Ardooie, Flemish Community, Belgium |
| Died | 10 April 1908 (aged 40) Ixelles, Belgium |
| Education | Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Brussels |
| Occupation | Sculptor |
Henri Boncquet (7 April 1868 – 10 April 1908) was a Belgian sculptor.

Henri Boncquet was born in Ardooie into a large family and was orphaned at the age of seven.[1]
In the immediate vicinity of his birthplace, he began his training in Roeselare in the studio of the sculptor Karel Dupon (1853-1907).[2] The latter was the elder brother of the later sculptor and medallist Josuë Dupon (1864-1935). Subsequently, from 1880 to 1881, Boncquet was enrolled at the local Academy of Arts, the SASK,[3] then moved to the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts in Brussels for a few years. He received his first official commission in 1894: the bronze eagle in the botanical garden at the Schaarbeek Gate in Brussels.[4]
In February 1897, Boncquet applied for the Belgian Prix de Rome[5] at the Artesis Hogeschool Antwerpen, won first prize and went to Rome in 1898. From there, further study trips with a stay in Nuremberg in 1899. Back from Rome, he moved Brussels to the district of Ixelles. In Brussels, he worked figuratively on the town hall of Saint-Gilles[6] on the triumphal arch in the Parc du Cinquantenaire and on three statues in the parks of Ixelles as well as on paintings in the botanical garden.[7] In 1903, his stone sculpture Family with Children was placed in the Malkastenpark in Düsseldorf.
Boncquet died in Ixelles of stomach cancer at the age of 40.
Works
- L’Aigle, Saint-Josse-ten-Noode, Le Botanique (1894)
- Solitaire, Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium (1894)
- Indolence, Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium (1900)
- Le Destin/Het Lot, Ixelles/Elsene, Square Léon Jacquet/Leon Jacquetsquare (1901)
- Familie mit Kind, Malkastenpark, Düsseldorf (positioned in 1903)
- Sollicitude Maternelle, Brüssel, Square de Meeûs (1903)
- L’Industrie, Hôtel de Ville de Saint-Gilles (1905)
- L’Industrie, Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium (1909)