%C2%A9 Artists Rights Society %28ARS%29%2C New York %2F ADAGP%2C Paris

Golden Bird, c. 1919

Bronzeexpand_more

The John R. Van Derlip Fundexpand_more  55.39

Constantin Brancusi began making abstract sculptures at about the same time Wassily Kandinsky, his contemporary was exploring abstraction in painting. Kandinsky eventually chose to obscure the natural objects that provided the starting point for his abstractions, whereas Brancusi took natural forms to an extreme of simplification but never completely excluded them from his work. Golden Bird belongs to a series of twenty-eight marbles and bronzes exploring the theme of birds and their flight, which Brancusi executed between 1910 and the early 1950s. His inspiration for these sculptures was a Romanian folktale about a dazzling golden bird called the Maiastra, whose magical song restored sight to the blind and youth to the aged. The shiny polished bronze of Golden Bird recalls the Maiastra's brilliant plumage, and the vertical thrust of the neck suggests open-throated song.

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Brancusi, Golden Bird (#476)
Details
Title
Golden Bird
Artist Life
1876 - 1957
Role
Artist
Accession Number
55.39
Curator Approved

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