Henri Proszynski (1887-1968) was a prominent French statuary sculptor, known for his monumental works and war memorial realizations, especially in south-western France.
Henri's grandfather was Józef Prószynski, a Polish refugee, who married Clémence Victoire de Saint Germain. She died when giving birth to Ignace (or Ignacy), Henri's father.
Henri's mother was Aline Louise Carré (deceased before 1918). Aline's brother, Louis, was an industrial entrepreneur at Clichy, near Paris.
Henri's father was Ignace Boleslas Proszynski, born on 24 August 1837, in Carentan. Ignace has been attending the Ecole Polonaise de Paris for ten years (1846-1856) He graduated from the ÃÂcole nationale des ponts et chaussées as an engineer in 1861.
Ignace Proszynski was then employed by the Ministère de la Marine et des Colonies in many places: Lorient (1861 and 1868), the Réunion island (1863), Moissac (1870), Oloron (1871), Pau (1872). At the end of the 1890s, he settled in the south of France, near the Pyrenees mountains: he bought the 13<sup>th</sup> century castle of Crampagna, which he inhabited during his retirement. Henri's father managed several projects in this region:
Ignace was awarded the rank of Chevalier de l'Ordre de la Légion d'honneur () on 10 August 1875.
According to archives sources, Aline and Ignace had also another son, George, a lawyer in Nogent-sur-Marne, who was Henri's witness at his wedding.
Henri was born in Pau, on 19 April 1887. His father lived in a villa along the Gave de Pau.
Following his father's consecutive relocations, Henri studied at the high school in Foix.
In the late 1900s, he moved to Paris, at 7 Belloni street (now Rue d'Arsonval). At the time, the area was already housing other artists, such as painters Charles Polowetski, Bernard Gussow and the sculptor Jacob Epstein. In the French capital, he studied under the direction of Jules Coutan.
Proszynski was mobilized on the front during WWI. As a veteran, he received after the war several official commissions for war memorials in the department of Ariège where he lived.
Henri married Marie Poplasko in Paris, on 9 July 1918, while still being a conscript. Marie was born on 8 June 1883, in Russia, from Nicolas Poplasko and Emilie Koscinska.
Henri regularly lived in the castle of Crampagna that his father bought at the end of the 19<sup>th</sup> century. He also worked there from time to time. He died on 9 December 1968, in Nogent-sur-Marne.
By and large, Proszynski earned his living by fulfilling official commissions, generally monumental ensembles (memorials, fountains).
From 1910 onwards, he regularly exhibited at the Salon des Artistes Français.
In April 1912, Henri became a member of the Société des Artistes Francais ().
At the eve of the First World War, his work was assessed as follows in the French magazine La Revue Moderne (25 January 1914):
Henri Proszynski exhibited at the Exposition du Grand Palais des Champs Elysees (), in April 1928; he showcased two fountains in bronze, stone and marble.
Another mention of his skills were made in the magazine Art et décoration : revue mensuelle d'art moderne () in January 1932:
In 1937, Henri became a member of the jury panel for the 1937 exhibition of the Société des Artistes Francais.
He left many of his artistic realizations in Corrèze and Ariège departments.
Proszynski often realized lost-wax casting in bronze, generally portraying animals, among which:
Proszynski works in the city of Neuvic have been registered on the French National Heritage list in September 2013.