Le Bozec was born in
Saint-Mayeux,
Côtes-d'Armor, Brittany. He was apprenticed to the
carpenter Alfred Ély-Monbet, of the nearby village of
Caurel. He then moved on to study at the École des Beaux-Arts of
Rennes, before progressing to that of Paris. He was a pupil of the sculptor
Jean Boucher, for whom he always retained a profound respect mingled with affection. Le Bozec settled in
Mellionnec. With Marcel Le Louët,
Georges Robin and others he joined the Breton art movement
Seiz Breur, a group of young artists who were dedicated to the revival of
decorative arts in Brittany. With
James Bouillé and
Xavier de Langlais, he also helped to found
An Droellen, the Breton studio of Christian Art. In 1927, in collaboration with the painter
René-Yves Creston, he designed the costumes for three plays: ''Ar C'hornandoned
, by Yann Bayon and Jean-Marie Perrot, Tog Jani
by Yves Le Moal and Lina'' by
Roparz Hemon, the first performance of which took place in January 1927. Soon becoming well known, he received many commissions from churches and chapels in Brittany, including
bas-reliefs for altars, as well as war memorials, which were built in large numbers at this period after World War I. Some of Le Bozec's sculptures were reproduced by the ceramics company
Faïencerie HB-Henriot in
Quimper, whose activities date back to 1690. Among these were "Woman Digging" (1930) which is a reduced version of the sculpture
Earth, which had been exhibited at the Salon in 1927. Another was "Meditation", showing the bust from Le Bozec's original work,
The Potato Harvester. This latter work was reissued in 2007 from the original moulds and is included in the new catalogue of the pottery in its collection of "Quimper White" ware. At an auction in the Drouot hotel in Paris, another of his works -
Young Girl with an Umbrella - reproduced by the Faïencerie HB-Henriot reached the sum of 3100 euros. In 1937, he made sculptures for the Chapel of Koat-Keo in
Scrignac (
Finistère), built by his friend James Bouillé at the initiative of
Abbot Perrot, founder of the Breton Catholic youth organization
Bleun-Brug. The chapel is seen as a significant attempt to create a distinctive modern Breton architecture. In 1946, he created the granite statue of
Our Lady of Kerdro in
Locmariaquer. 2.70 metres high, the sculpture was left for sixteen years in the church before being moved to the edge of Kerpenhir to replace another statue that had been erected in 1883, but had been destroyed during World War II. He died at
Mellionnec,
Côtes-d'Armor. ==See also==