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1911 Encyclopædia Britannica/Dumont

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DUMONT, the name of a family of prominent French artists. François Dumont (1688–1726), a sculptor, best known for his figures in the church of Saint Sulpice, Paris, was the brother of the painter Jacques Dumont,[1] known as “le Romain” (1701–1781), whose chief success was gained with a great allegorical composition for the Paris hôtel-de-ville in 1761. François’s son Edme (1720–1775), the latter’s son Jacques Edme (1761–1844), and the last-named’s son Augustin Alexander (1801–1884) were also famous sculptors.

See G. Vattier, Une Famille d’artistes (1890).

  1. Not to be confounded with his contemporary Jean Joseph Dumons (1687–1779), sometimes called Dumont, best known for his designs for the Aubusson tapestries.