Cornet was a teacher at the
Académie Scandinave (
English:
Scandinavian Academy) a private art school in Paris, from 1929 to 1935. He initially worked in a
cubist style on his sculptures, and drew inspiration from
Egyptian sculpture. Later he worked in a more realism style. From 1954 to 1955, Cornet worked on the
Tulle Memorial, a monument dedicated to the memory of the victims of
World War II in
Tulle in
Nouvelle-Aquitaine, France. Starting in 1964, Cornet exhibited with the
le Groupe des Neuf (the
Group of Nine) at the Galerie Vendôme in Paris, of which group he was one of the co-founders a year earlier. Cornet sculpted a large number of monumental portraits (
Campagne) for the
Palais de Chaillot in Paris, as well as a sculpture (
La Vienne) for the Champ de Juillet in
Limoges, (
Hygieia) for the Sèvres manufacture in
Luxeuil-les-Bains, (
Venus and Cupid) for the Orangerie in
Meudon in Île-de-France, and a bronze (''Tour d'Auvergne'') for the
Panthéon in Paris. Cornet was recognized for his work and awarded the Wildenstein prize in 1967, and Paul-Louis Weiller prize in 1972. == Death and legacy ==