August Vilhelm Saabye, also known as August Wilhelm Saabye, was a Danish sculptor.
Background
Saabye was born in Skivholme, Aarhus, the son of vicar Erhard Saabye (1778–1851) and Susanna Schmidt (1785–1856). He competed as an individual for the Neuhausen Prize in 1854 and although he did not win, his work was praised so that he obtained the support of Herman Wilhelm Bissen and his father"s permission to take up sculpture.
Education
He studied at the Copenhagen Academy of Fine Arts and then worked in Bissen"s studio, learning the neoclassical tradition of Thorvaldsen.
Career
He initially undertook art and design work, then produced small bronzes, reliefs and portrait busts, with elaborate detail and embossing. Saabye went to Rome via Paris in 1855, staying there until 1865, learning more about the sculptures of antiquity. Here he started producing larger statues.
His pupils included Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen who studied with him from 1882.
A major breakthrough and international recognition came in 1883 with what art historian Georg Nordensvan describes as the "elegant nude figure" in marble of Susanna Before the Council. His most popular work is Hans Christian Andersen of 1887 in the Rosenborg Castle Gardens, Copenhagen.
In 1888 he was appointed Professor at the Art School for Women in Copenhagen. August Saabye died on 12 November 1916 and is buried in Garnisons Cemetery, Copenhagen.
Saabye married Anna Pauline Hansen (1822–1867) on 26 October 1858 in Rome.
They had one son, engineer and entrepreneur Johannes Saabye (1860–1946).
Membership
He was made a member of the Danish Academy of Fine Arts in 1871.