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to speak on behalf of
Warburg's siblings who were still minors. The participants voted unanimously to order the sale of the three slaves bequeathed to the children. Warburg's portion of his mother's estate was valued at $ 252.00. Not willing to wait for the distribution of the sale proceeds, Warburg
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sculptor. Born enslaved from birth in New
Orleans in the mid-1820s, he was legally manumitted by his father, who was also his owner, at four years old. Warburg initially apprenticed as a marble cutter and later worked as a sculptor in
188:, lavished praise on the young artist's work: "This exquisite specimen of sculpture", the work "by a young Creole of our city". the critic stated, "reflects infinite credit upon the taste and talent of our townsmen".
195:. Before he left, Warburg filed a friendly lawsuit against his father to seek his share of the distribution of his mother's estate. His father, in turn, hosted a meeting with a notary public and six
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with his wife, Louise
Ernestine. Warburg worked successfully as a sculptor in Rome for two years. His life was cut short, when he contracted an illness and died days later, on January 12, 1859.
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Warburg was apprenticed to French artist, Phillippe
Garbeille, as a marble cutter when he was a young man. While in his early twenties, Warburg established his own studio-workshop in the
149:. Blondeau's mother was also enslaved by Daniel Warburg. Marie Rose was given her freedom after Warburg's birth. Warburg was the oldest of his parents five children and was
165:. In the 1840s and early 1850s, Warburg received commissions to create portrait busts, religious statuary and gravestones. Most notably, he designed the floors for
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by his father when he was four years old. She died in 1837 at the age of 33, bequeathing three enslaved people to her five children.
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from 1852 to 1856, Warburg was given letters of introduction to potential patrons by prominent
Americans, including
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Increasing racial tensions, due possibly to jealousy from white artists in the community, caused
Warburg to move to
239:. In 1856, the Duchess of Sutherland commissioned a series of bas-reliefs from Warburg, based on the story of
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was exhibited for viewing and purchase in New
Orleans for $ 500 (~$ 18,312 in 2023). The local newspaper,
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141:. Warburg's mother was Daniel's mistress, Marie Rose Blondeau, a mixed-race enslaved woman from
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448:""A Mulatto Sculptor from New Orleans" : Eugene Warburg's European Career in the 1850s"
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selected his father to represent his interests, and sailed for Europe in
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in 1856. He was encouraged and supported in his work by prominent
American and British
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Contraband Guides: Race, Transatlantic
Culture, and the Arts in the Civil War Era
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in 1853, where he worked as a successful sculptor until his death in 1859.
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in late 1825 or possibly early 1926. His father, Daniel Warburg, was a
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387:. University of California Press. p. 29.
237:Elizabeth Leveson-Gower, Duchess of Sutherland
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182:Ganymede Offering a Cup of Nectar to Jupiter
246:In 1857, with letters of introduction from
219:Ambassador to France. Warburg traveled to
109:in the 1840s and early 1850s. He moved to
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365:Kemp, Robert R; Haas, Edward F. (1979).
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133:emigrant from a prominent family in
121:Joseph Eugene Warburg, was born in
35:Marble bust by Eugene Warburg, 1853
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499:American people of Cuban descent
385:African American Art and Artists
479:19th-century American sculptors
180:In 1850, Warburg's bas-relief,
203:While studying and working in
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309:"biography of Eugene WARBURG"
16:American sculptor (1825–1859)
504:American emigrants to Italy
369:. Louisiana's State Museum.
333:Kaplan, Paul H. D. (2020).
282:African Americans in France
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367:Louisiana's Black Heritage
252:The Duchess of Suthereland
169:, the oldest cathedral in
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489:Artists from New Orleans
514:American male sculptors
452:New York Public Library
383:Lewis, Samella (2003).
254:, Warburg traveled to
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248:Harriet Beecher Stowe
233:Harriet Beecher Stowe
45:Joseph Eugene Warburg
339:. Penn State Press.
272:African-American Art
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457:13 October
419:2021-05-31
318:11 October
288:References
211:diplomat,
151:manumitted
117:Early life
127:Louisiana
266:See also
175:Catholic
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90:American
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221:Belgium
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135:Hamburg
48:c. 1825
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