logo
The French sculptors building the new Statue of Liberty

The French sculptors building the new Statue of Liberty

Spectator10 hours ago

At a miserable-looking rally for the centre-left Place Publique in mid-March, its co-president, MEP Raphaël Glucksmann, made international headlines calling for the Trump administration to return the Statue of Liberty, gifted by the French in 1886 to commemorate the Declaration of Independence: 'It was our gift to you. But apparently you despise her. So she will be happy here with us.' The predictably sensationalist headlines dissipated in a flurry of Republican outrage against 'the low-level French politician' as quickly as they had arrived. But Glucksmann's demand – sincere or not – caught the attention of a group of sculptors who, in their words, have 'taken up the dream of civilisation' to produce monumental civic sculpture.
Two days after the MEP's proclamation, Atelier Missor posted on X: 'Keep the Statue of Liberty; it's rightfully yours. But get ready for another one. A New Statue of Liberty, much bigger, made from titanium to withstand millions of years. We, the French people, are going to make it again!' It was accompanied by an AI-generated image of her future titanium partner Prometheus. So far, so American Golden Age, validated by a typically laconic reply from Elon Musk: 'Looks cool.' The brief online exchange was a public-relations coup for Missor – and decried as such by cynics. Surely no one believed that this hare-brained scheme could be feasibly implemented? Think again.
To understand the sincerity of Missor, one must return to where their ambitions started. 'I found the toppling of public statues intolerable,' its namesake founder Missor Movahed tells me at their studio on the outskirts of Meaux, 40 miles north-east of Paris. 'I did not understand what these people were doing or what they were saying. Would they rather these great men had never existed?' he says, referring to the convulsive, iconoclastic riots of 2020 – the respective beheadings and defacements of Columbus, Colston and Churchill. Movahed was 30 years old and had no prior sculptural training. He and his friends began discussing the postmodern cultural malaise on a YouTube channel from a disused garage in Nice, with the ambition of producing small figurative busts, at scale, of the luminaries to whose lives and writings they were turning: Nietzsche, Napoleon, Joan of Arc, Dostoevsky.
The son of a successful painter, Movahed grew up in Paris with neither plans nor qualification: 'For 12 years, I did nothing with my life: I led a life of a wastrel bohème. But being in Paris – the greatest work of art in the world – I felt a growing weight to produce something monumental… to create monuments that will stand on the landscape of humanity.' All simultaneously informed by and documented on YouTube – a kind of modern carnet – they constructed rubber moulds and later a working smelter for limited-edition bronzes fashioned by hand. 'There is no sculptor or foundry that produces classical civic sculpture in France to whom we could apprentice ourselves: all of them have closed, other than those we have on the internet.'
Don't mistake the lack of formal training, however, for a lack of rigour or thought: 'We sculpt the statues out of clay always questioning what one of the Greek philosophers would say if he were watching… [Only a few other] highly specialist sculptors are using the 1,000-year-old 'lost wax method'.' This process involves 1,300°C molten bronze being poured into plaster casts of wax models. Within six months, orders were in the hundreds; by their third year, they numbered more than 5,000, helped by the binge in late-night mail-ordering that came to characterise successive lockdowns. Online, Missor had captivated a receptive audience, one that was seeking a resurrection of their European cultural inheritance.
In August 2023, Missor received its first public commission: a €170,000 gilded bronze of Joan of Arc from the centre-right mayor of Nice, Christian Estrosi. The 15th-century soldier-saint is a figure fiercely contested in France: à gauche, a martyred, cross-dressing teenage farmer; to the right, a devout Catholic rebel who lifted the siege of Orléans. Delivered a year later, the nine-tonne, 4.5-metre high statue was unveiled in December at the inauguration of a new car park next to the Eglise Sainte-Jeanne d'Arc.
But there was a problem: the statue was found to have broken public procurement obligations and in January 2025 it was ordered that she should be removed. It sparked a huge backlash and in March this year, protestors arrived by dawn to pour a layer of asphalt around the base. Joan was going nowhere.
There is no sign of the impending threat of prosecution when I arrive at the atelier, a corrugated shed off the Parisian suburban line: a dozen workers in dungarees – a uniform they trace to the compagnons du devoir who built the French cathedrals – are methodically plastering a monumental classical face surrounded by scaffolding. Their troubles played out between the regional and national headlines, the atelier seldom gives interviews. For nearly three hours, we speak, stood between remnant prototypes and plaster models that are now the subject of public – and legal – controversy. 'All sculptures are public memories that last, until we topple them, and by not making them we are losing our memories,' Movahed tells me. 'There are many who are artistically revolted by what we do as a momentary reaction to contemporary art. But there is a morbidity to civic 'fine art' today because of the way it depresses those who have funded it – us, the people.'
He explains that titanium has never been used before for figurative sculpture. He views it as 'the frontier of both engineering and art – two things that must work together'. And for him the Franco-American alliance that spawned the Statue of Liberty was more than simply a historic fact: 'The founding myths of revolution that underpin the French and American republics represent an emancipation of the individual will and an unleashing of potential.' He talks with such passion that he forgets the sans-culottes tore down civic sculpture on an industrial scale.
'The Statue of Liberty represented the most beautiful thing a country can do: it was by the people, for the people. Prometheus will represent the possibilities of modern patronage: we have received hundreds of messages asking us to open crowdfunding.' Indeed, Movahed does not name the 'significant American backers' that have pledged support but cites Musk's Starbase as the intended location. A tiny bronze maquette of the rebel Titan – credited with shaping humans from clay – sits atop a pyramidal pedestal no taller than a hand that will 'chart the history of civilisation'. It is a world away from Boca Chica, Texas, and the task he illustrates with maddening conviction under a looming court order is beyond reason. 'We are called crazy, but our aim is simple: to let people dream as we have chosen to dream.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Unsure when Trump's big bill will move forward? So are the senators
Unsure when Trump's big bill will move forward? So are the senators

The Herald Scotland

time3 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Unsure when Trump's big bill will move forward? So are the senators

Members of the upper chamber are divided on a handful of provisions, including reforms to Medicaid, along with the legislation's trillion-dollar price tag. As Senate Republican leadership tries to settle disputes and get everybody on board, there is a lack of consensus as to when a vote will even happen - and a fast-approaching and self-imposed July 4 deadline that suggests everyone could be working this weekend. Big Beautiful Bill 101: What you need to know about Trump's tax bill "We've got a lot of work to do," Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisconsin, told reporters on June 25. Johnson has been a public critic of the president's "big, beautiful bill," citing concerns about how much it would add to the federal deficit. Asked whether disagreements might be ironed out by the end of the week, Johnson said, "I can't imagine it would be." Some of his colleagues are more optimistic they can get those t's crossed in the coming days. Some are saying they can cross the t's before the end of the week in Washington. "We're going to get the bill across the finish line by Saturday," Sen. Bernie Moreno, R-Ohio, said, adding that his prediction is, "Saturday at 3 o'clock!" Saturday, 3 p.m., he clarified, as the Senate is not a stranger to twilight votes. Trump and members of his administration have said they want the bill on the president's desk come Independence Day. But there are more steps than just Senate approval needed between now and July 4. If and when the Senate passes their version of the spending bill, the legislation must be reconciled with the House - where lawmakers narrowly approved the first version. Questions remain as to whether, once the Senate does their part, House Speaker Mike Johnson can once again herd his conservative-heavy crew to get this bill out of Congress. Sen. Roger Marshall, R-Kansas, said he thinks lower chamber Republicans would struggle to say no - and as a result, disappoint the president. "There's so many great things in this bill," he told reporters, "I think it's going to be hard for the House to vote against it."

Fox News' new Gen Z star Brett Cooper misses debut
Fox News' new Gen Z star Brett Cooper misses debut

The Herald Scotland

time3 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Fox News' new Gen Z star Brett Cooper misses debut

Cooper, who is currently on a spring tour, shared a recorded message, seemingly captured on a cell phone video, telling viewers that she was "reporting live" from a Buc-ce's gas station and convenience store location in Texas. "I was so excited to kick off this new partnership with Fox in this official way, but a series of unfortunate events left my husband and I on the side of the road in Texas on the freeway as we were trying to get between Austin and Dallas," Cooper said. Cooper added that she "wanted to send in this video, just to say hi and to thank you all for the congratulations, and the excitement. I am so excited to join Fox as a contributor. I can't wait to be on their shows even more regularly," she said, promising the experience "will be so much fun." Cooper, 23, said she expects to appear on Fox Thursday, June 26. The Tennessee resident, social media influencer and podcast host's hiring by the conservative leaning cable news network as a contributor was first announced Wednesday. Cooper -- who boasts over 4.5 million followers on TikTok, Instagram, YouTube and X -- could become one of Fox's youngest stars. Less combative than other young women who rose to stardom on the right, Cooper found fame like left leaning "Call Her Daddy" podcast star Alex Cooper, with whom the influencer seemingly bears no relation in name or political views, by discussing cultural issues that matter to young women. Lara Trump plans to interview President Donald Trump, Democrats on new Fox show In January, the UCLA alum launched her own podcast, "The Brett Cooper Show" in which she comments on both pop culture and politics. She previously spent two years hosting a video podcast "The Comments Section" from 2022 to 2024 for controversial conservative commentator Ben Shapiro's company The Daily Wire. In recent months, Fox News has seemingly made further efforts to appeal to women. In February, former Republican National Committee co-chair Lara Trump -- the daughter-in-law of President Donald Trump -- launched her own show on the network. In doing so, the wife of President Trump's middle son, Eric, passed up a Cabinet position, a possible U.S. Senate appointment and became the first family member of a sitting president to host a television program. After Fox News announced Trump's hiring, criticism followed. The Daily Beast said she tried and failed to paint her father-in-law as "pro-feminist" after Trump featured female Trump administration officials Pam Bondi, Tulsi Gabbard and Karoline Leavitt. The New Yorker coined her "The New Trump-Family Megaphone."

Former GOP Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown launches Senate bid
Former GOP Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown launches Senate bid

The Herald Scotland

time3 hours ago

  • The Herald Scotland

Former GOP Massachusetts Senator Scott Brown launches Senate bid

In a campaign video shared on X, Brown touted Trump's accomplishments in office while bashing Democrat Rep. Chris Pappas, who is also running for the seat. "President Trump is fighting every day to right the ship." Brown said. "He sealed the border. He stood up to China, and he restored our standing in the world. If we send Chris Pappas to the Senate, we'll get more of the same. Out of touch policies he's pushed forward during the terms that he's been there, dragging us right back to the Biden years. It's time to move on." Pappas on X knocked Brown. "It's official: MAGA loyalist Scott Brown just announced he's running to flip this seat red," he wrote. "New Hampshire rejected him before, and we can do it again." Though there was some speculation that former Republican New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu would run for the seat, he later dismissed that idea. ""No, I'm not going to run," he told The Pulse of NH radio show. "For me and my family, it's just not right for us."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store