Émile Sacré (1844–1882) was a Belgian painter, after whom the Prix Émile Sacré was named. Émile Sacré's father was Auguste Sacré, an engineer who had invented a machine dividing the bast of hemp and flax with a hatchel (hackle) to make it safe to be spun, and who was manager of the Société de Saint-Gilles linen mill near Brussels. Sacré studied at the Académie royale des beaux-arts de Bruxelles from 1866 to 1870 and with the architect Jean-Pierre Cluysenaer. He died at the age of 38. His brother established a triennial prize, along with the Prix Auguste Sacré for engineering in memory of the brothers' father, in a legacy of 1904. The sculptor Charles Van Der Stappen (1843–1910) made a bronze of Émile Sacré which was presented at the exhibition of Les XX in 1884.
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