Prices incl. VAT, free shipping worldwide
Ready to ship today,
Delivery time appr. 3-6 workdays
Product description
"Erotic Nude Statue - New Necklace - signed Paul Ponsard"
Weight | 4 kg |
Art Nouveau Statue - New Necklace - signed Paul Ponsard
Among the most graceful and intimate expressions of early 20th-century sculpture, Paul Ponsard’s “New Necklace” embodies the fluidity, sensuality, and introspective beauty characteristic of art nouveau statue and erotic nude art. This exquisite bronze piece, bearing the artist’s signature, presents a kneeling nude woman captured in a moment of tender self-awareness. With her arms raised gently toward her collar, adjusting a delicate necklace, she exudes both quiet modesty and confident sensuality. The figure is not idealized in a neoclassical sense but rather softened by natural curves, flowing contours, and a subtle inner life that mirrors the principles of Symbolism and Art Nouveau alike. This nude statue stands not only as a celebration of the female form, but also as a meditation on adornment, ritual, and the aesthetics of introspection.
A Short Life, a Lasting Imprint
Paul Ponsard was born in 1882 in France and, despite his tragically short life—cut short in 1915 during the First World War—he managed to produce a body of work marked by profound sensitivity and stylistic refinement. Trained within the Beaux-Arts tradition, Ponsard quickly distinguished himself from many of his contemporaries through a devotion to naturalistic beauty infused with modern emotional depth. His work reflects the influence of the French Symbolist movement and of artists like Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux, as well as the rising wave of Art Nouveau, which emphasized ornamental forms, organic elegance, and a return to subjective, emotional figuration. Ponsard’s sculptures, though fewer in number due to his early death, are distinguished by a tactile intimacy and the ability to express universal experiences—love, longing, beauty—through the body alone.
Paris and the Dawn of Modern Intimacy
“New Necklace” was most likely created in Paris between 1905 and 1910, at a time when the city was the epicenter of artistic innovation. Unlike the grand monuments and allegories dominating academic sculpture, this art nouveau statue turns inward, offering a moment of gentle solitude. The figure’s kneeling posture and downturned gaze suggest not performative eroticism but personal, private grace. She is absorbed not in vanity, but in the quiet ritual of self-adornment. The necklace—a simple, elegant chain—becomes both a literal object and a symbolic gesture: it binds the spiritual and the sensual, the everyday and the sacred. Such duality is central to the language of erotic nude art, where the human form is not just displayed, but contemplated.
The Fluid Line of Art Nouveau
The composition of “New Necklace” perfectly illustrates the signature lines and aesthetics of the Art Nouveau movement. The figure’s soft anatomy flows like a vine or river, unbroken and harmonious. Her hair is gently parted and coiled beneath a delicately textured cap, framed with stylized floral elements that echo the naturalistic ornamentation of the period. The slight tilt of her head, the graceful curvature of her spine, and the relaxed symmetry of her arms imbue the sculpture with a lyrical rhythm. Every detail—from the folds of the cushion beneath her knees to the clasp of the necklace—is rendered with quiet precision, contributing to a unified sense of poetic stillness. This is art nouveau statue at its most refined: elegant, decorative, yet profoundly human.
Eroticism as Reverence, Not Display
Unlike the more theatrical nude statues of earlier academic traditions, Ponsard’s approach to the female body is rooted in subtlety and reverence. In “New Necklace”, nudity is not an act of revelation, but of presence. The body is complete in itself, neither seducing nor shying away. It exists in a space of autonomy and softness, an image of serene physical being. This makes the sculpture an exemplar of erotic nude art that transcends titillation and instead invites contemplation. The woman depicted is not an object of desire but a subject engaged in a quiet, private gesture—transforming the personal into the universal.
Bronze as Living Surface
The medium of bronze enhances the intimacy and sensuality of the sculpture. Its warm, rich patina breathes life into the surface, highlighting every subtle shift in musculature, every curve of hip and shoulder. The play of light across the bronze creates an ever-changing interplay of shadow and gleam, as if the figure were moving in slow, thoughtful rhythm. Ponsard’s exceptional modeling captures not just anatomical accuracy, but psychological nuance. The tactile quality of the bronze invites not only the eye but the imagination to linger—an essential trait in the best examples of art nouveau statue and nude statue alike.
An Intimate Legacy Preserved in Bronze
Paul Ponsard’s early death during the First World War robbed modern sculpture of one of its most promising voices. Yet works like “New Necklace” endure, precisely because they resist the grandiose and the ephemeral. They offer instead something rarer: quiet beauty, contemplative form, and emotional resonance. This nude statue is a testament to Ponsard’s ability to capture fleeting, human moments in eternal materials—a gift that continues to speak with eloquence across generations.
Where Beauty Becomes Gesture
“New Necklace” is more than a sculpture. It is a gesture preserved in bronze—a moment of tenderness made timeless. As a masterwork of art nouveau statue, it showcases the sculptor’s reverence for the human body and his skill in translating personal emotion into universal form. As erotic nude art, it affirms the sensuality of presence without spectacle. And as a work of Paul Ponsard, it remains a luminous echo of a voice silenced too soon, but never forgotten.
Wide: 20 cm
High: 30 cm
Depth: 20 cm
Wight: 4,1 kg
100% Bronze
Our advantages
free shipping
Worldwide free shipping
14 days money back
You can cancel your order
within 14 days
secure payment services
Paypal, Master Card, Visa, American Express and more