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"Standing Female Nude - Gaston Lachaise Sculptures - Bronze"
Weight | 20,4 kg |
Standing Female Nude – Modern Bronze Sculpture after Gaston Lachaise
This Standing Female Nude is emblematic of the aesthetic that defines the best Gaston Lachaise Sculptures—a striking celebration of feminine volume, serenity, and stability. The woman stands fully nude, her arms gently poised behind her back, her feet planted firmly, yet her posture radiates effortless grace. Her head, subtly raised, suggests an inner calm or perhaps a spiritual ascent. While the figure’s proportions depart from classical symmetry, they are deliberate, sculpted with the same artistic conviction that birthed masterpieces such as Gaston Lachaise Floating Woman. This sculpture is not a portrait; it is a totem. The woman depicted is both of the earth and beyond it—an embodiment of primal energy and serene self-assurance.
A Visionary Born into the Age of Transition
Gaston Lachaise was born on March 19, 1882, in Paris, into a world of shifting artistic boundaries and renewed sculptural ambition. Educated at the École des Beaux-Arts, he began his career rooted in the tradition of French academicism, but his destiny would carry him across the Atlantic, to New York City, where he would radically redefine the female figure in modern art. Emigrating in 1906, Lachaise quickly became known not just as a sculptor, but as a visionary—an artist who saw in the female form not fragility or passivity, but strength, power, and elemental permanence. Among all early 20th-century sculptors, Gaston Lachaise Artist remains the most singular in his reverence for the female body, rendering it not in idealized proportion but in exalted monumentality.
Bronze as Sacred Skin
Cast in dark patinated bronze, the sculpture captures light like a living surface. Subtle curves gleam where form catches illumination—on the forehead, the upper chest, the thighs—while shadows deepen the creases and recesses, enhancing its volumetric sensuality. The medium is key: in Gaston Lachaise Sculptures, bronze becomes more than material—it becomes mythic. The polished smoothness is not decorative, but devotional. This figure’s body is not objectified, but elevated. In the hands of Gaston Lachaise Artist, the nude transcends eroticism and becomes spiritual architecture, a modern icon carved for a new kind of shrine.
A Woman Who Commands the Space
Lachaise’s lifelong muse and wife, Isabel Dutaud Nagle, was the inspiration for much of his sculptural output. She appears, refracted and transformed, in nearly all his works—from the voluminous gravity of Gaston Lachaise Floating Woman to the grounded sensuality of this standing nude. He once described her as “the goddess I seek to express in all things,” and this statement is the emotional foundation of his art. Every line of this sculpture, every deliberate curve and elegant volume, reflects his profound veneration for her presence. It is in that veneration that Gaston Lachaise Man is revealed—not as dominant or confrontational, but as witness, as celebrant, as servant to the divine feminine.
Monumentality Without Mass
Though not colossal in scale, this sculpture exudes monumentality in its presence. The figure’s upward posture and voluminous lower body anchor her as though she were part of the landscape itself, yet her serene face and flowing form suggest ascent. This paradox—weight and lightness, density and movement—is one of the hallmarks of Gaston Lachaise Sculptures. It is a synthesis born of Lachaise’s dual cultural identity: trained in the rigor of Parisian form, liberated by the American avant-garde. In this way, the Standing Female Nude speaks in a language of contradiction resolved—intimate yet grand, fleshly yet abstract, timeless yet unmistakably modern.
Signed in Homage and Continuity
This sculpture bears the signature from the Artist, a tribute that connects it to one of modernism’s most unique sculptural voices. Though this particular piece is executed after Lachaise, it retains the unmistakable formal vocabulary and philosophical reverence that define his legacy. Collectors of Gaston Lachaise Bronze works recognize this visual language immediately—the powerful thighs, the poised breasts, the clean-lined mask of the face, the elegant but immovable stance. The signature anchors the piece to a sculptural lineage that continues to influence generations of figurative artists and modernists alike.
Beyond the Classical Ideal
Unlike Rodin or Maillol, Lachaise did not seek to temper emotion through form, nor did he pursue classical restraint. His vision was more elemental, more daring, more internal. In his work, the female figure is not decoration—it is declaration. This Standing Female Nude is the modern heir to fertility goddesses and prehistoric figurines, but filtered through 20th-century abstraction and emotional precision. It is this synthesis that defines the essence of Gaston Lachaise Art—a celebration not of the surface of women, but of their symbolic permanence and power.
A Figure Both Grounded and Eternal
This Modern Art Sculpture – Standing Female Nude, created in the spirit of Gaston Lachaise, is far more than an aesthetic object. It is a philosophical stance, a visual poem, a sculptural hymn to the generative and indomitable force of femininity. Whether placed in a gallery, a garden, or a contemplative interior, it commands its space with quiet magnificence. As part of the enduring influence of Gaston Lachaise Sculptures, it is a testament to the artist’s lifelong quest to sculpt not just bodies, but the mythic essence of womanhood itself.
Width: 23 cm
Height: 99 cm
Depth: 24 cm
Weight: 20,4 kg
100% Bronze
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