Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 8

Bronze Sculpture by Russell Baldwin

More From This SellerView All
  • Raul Coronel Ceramic Sculpture, California, c.1965
    By Raul Coronel
    Located in Costa Mesa, CA
    Raul Coronel Ceramic Sculpture, California, c.1965. Reference Photos Courtesy of Steve Aldana / Esoteric Survey.
    Category

    20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Figurative Sculptures

    Materials

    Stoneware

  • Tanya Aguiñiga Monumental Wall Sculpture, 2017
    By Tanya Aguiniga
    Located in Costa Mesa, CA
    Tanya Aguiñiga Monumental Hand Woven Felt Wall Sculpture, 2017.
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Tapestries

    Materials

    Textile, Felt

  • 'Disneyland Destruction' by Jeff Gillete
    By Jeff Gillete
    Located in Costa Mesa, CA
    'Disneyland Destruction' by Jeff Gillete circa 2015. Acrylic and collage on canvas.
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Acrylic, Wood

  • David Cressey & Robert Maxwell Planter for Earthgender, circa 1970
    By Robert Maxwell and David Cressey, David Cressey, Robert Maxwell
    Located in Costa Mesa, CA
    David Cressey & Robert Maxwell Planter for Earthgender, circa 1970.
    Category

    20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Planters and Jardinieres

    Materials

    Ceramic

  • Hans Wegner AP-19 Papa Bear Chair in for A.P. Stolen, Denmark, circa 1952
    By Hans J. Wegner, A.P. Stolen
    Located in Costa Mesa, CA
    Hans Wegner AP-19 papa bear chair for A.P. Stolen, Denmark, circa 1952. This piece has been expertly restored in Kravet Couture tan & gray wool upholstery. A.P. Stolen Makers stamp t...
    Category

    20th Century Danish Mid-Century Modern Lounge Chairs

    Materials

    Fabric, Wool, Teak

  • Peter Pepper Products Black Marble Bowl, California, c.1975
    By Peter Pepper Products, Angelo Mangiarotti, Sergio Asti
    Located in Costa Mesa, CA
    Peter Pepper Products Black Marble Bowl / Catchall, California, c.1975.
    Category

    20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Decorative Bowls

    Materials

    Marble

You May Also LikeView All
  • Russell Secrest Bronze Kinetic Sculpture
    By Russell Secrest
    Located in Atlanta, GA
    Mid-Century Modernist Bronze and Teak Sculpture by Russell Secrest, American, circa 1970s. Russell Secrest (1935-2010) is known for both his sculptures and modernist jewelry designs....
    Category

    Vintage 1970s American Mid-Century Modern Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Bronze

  • Wood Cubist Sculpture by Leo Russell
    By Leo Russell
    Located in Philadelphia, PA
    Wood sculpture by artist Leo Russell. Chicago born artist who worked mostly in painting and silkscreen did a series of wood sculptures in the 1940s. Pieces were acquired by the Gugge...
    Category

    Vintage 1940s American Modern Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Wood

    Wood Cubist Sculpture by Leo Russell
    $2,400 Sale Price
    31% Off
  • "Reproof" A Marble Sculpture by Edward Russell Thaxter
    By Edward R. Thaxter
    Located in Los Angeles, CA
    This enchanting museum quality Carrara marble group is the work of Edward Russell Thaxter (born Yarmouth, ME 1857-died Naples, Italy 1881). The sculpture depicts a young girl sternly scolds her cat, who has just attacked a bird's nest. She clutches the cat to her chest and looks at it disapprovingly, while waving her hand in discipline. Meanwhile, a dead bird lies at her feet and feathers hang limply from the cat’s mouth. This scene is a prelude to the responsibilities of motherhood: the young girl who is now reprimanding her cat will have to ensure that her own children are well behaved in the future. The sculpture rests on a dark green serpentine marble pedestal. Although Edward Thaxter's life was short, he excelled in creating detailed neoclassical sculpture. Signed: E. R. Thaxter Titled: Reproof Circa 1878-1880 Measures: Height with pedestal 76" (193 cm) Height of sculpture 40" (101 cm) Another example of this marble figure is in the Smithsonian National Museum in Washington DC. Artist biography: Edward Russell Thaxter was only twenty-four years old when he died, but in his brief career as a sculptor he garnered praise for his work and was deemed an artist with a promising future. Born in Yarmouth, Maine, he is believed to have chosen to study sculpture after seeing the work of John Rogers. At the age of sixteen, Thaxter moved to Boston and studied with the portrait sculptor John D. Perry. In 1878 Thaxter left for Florence, Italy, where he took a studio and began to create the neoclassical works that won him critical attention. In 1881 he contracted typhoid fever, which left him in a weakened condition, and within the year the young sculptor died in Naples. Thaxter's untimely death was noted with genuine regret in the American press. The critic James Jackson...
    Category

    Antique 1870s Figurative Sculptures

    Materials

    Carrara Marble

  • "Crosscut waves", studio glass sculpture by Monica Guggisberg & Philip Baldwin
    By Monica Guggisberg & Philip Baldwin
    Located in Aachen, DE
    "Crosscut waves", a studio glass sculpture by Monica Guggisberg and Philip Baldwin. A unique glass sculpture from the times when the two artists had their studio located in Nonfoux i...
    Category

    Late 20th Century Swiss Other Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Art Glass, Blown Glass

  • Russell Wray Brutalist Cast Bronze Abstract Male Nude Figure Sculpture Signed
    Located in Philadelphia, PA
    Vintage Brutalist Cast Bronze Abstract Male Nude Figure Sculpture Signed "Wray" by Russell Wray. Item features heavy cast bronze construction, desi...
    Category

    Mid-20th Century Brutalist Figurative Sculptures

    Materials

    Bronze

  • Catcher of the Skies, glass sculpture by Monica Guggisberg & Philip Baldwin
    By Monica Guggisberg & Philip Baldwin
    Located in London, GB
    'Catcher of the Skies' is a unique pink, orange and black hand-blown and cut glass artwork with steel hull by the American and Swiss artists, Philip Baldwin and Monica Guggisberg. Combining Scandinavian and Venetian glass making techniques, their sculptural boat centerpieces are made from smaller blown and cut glass components nestled (in sand) inside a metallic hull. 'We are migratory creatures; the history of our species is about journeys, departures, leaving and arriving, starting over. And none more so than ourselves. Our new work is both culturally and personally inclined. An autobiographical touch in civilizational reflection. Wherever man goes he builds, laying down cultural lines which gradually transform into relics and artefacts over time's inevitable march. Urban landscapes and complex designs grow and expand, deteriorate and decay. And on again we move, taking the memories of our exploits with us to use in the next story.' B&G Baldwin (1947, New York) and Guggisberg (1955, Bern) have been a collaborative team for over forty years. They share an instinctive appreciation for the subtle blending of art and design, functionality and abstract expression, combined with a love of material – especially glass. The list of museums and collections which have acquired their works is long and impressive. Individual showings, as well as participation in group shows, have given them opportunities to present their works at leading galleries and in major museums in Europe, Japan and the United States and their works rank among the best to be found in the international glass art scene. Working freelance, they have also designed successful products for international glass manufacturers since 1985. Their clients have included renowned firms like Rosenthal, Steuben, Corning and Venini. Over time their work has developed its own distinctive signature, based in Italian cold-working (battuto) combined with the Swedish overlay process for layering colours. They have been pioneers in adapting these techniques and in creating a distinct expression of their own. Colour, light, texture, pattern, and shape together reveal an undercurrent of meaning and value, adhering to the simplest of forms and clear lines. Over the years they have become more sculptural in focus, while seeking to imbue their work with a deep connection to archetypal forms and shapes, and striving for the highest level of craftsmanship. They address eternal symbols of human culture and history, while embracing contemporary evolution in form and meaning. In recent years large installations and major exhibitions in public spaces, such as Canterbury Cathedral...
    Category

    2010s European Organic Modern Abstract Sculptures

    Materials

    Steel

Recently Viewed

View All