Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 6

Chésade
Envol by Chésade - Unique bronze sculpture, animal art, barnacle, flying bird

Contemporary

$7,034.48
£5,211.50
€5,900
CA$9,636.89
A$10,692.94
CHF 5,601.19
MX$131,124.17
NOK 71,245.24
SEK 67,252.47
DKK 44,880
Shipping
Retrieving quote...
The 1stDibs Promise:
Authenticity Guarantee,
Money-Back Guarantee,
24-Hour Cancellation

About the Item

Envol is a unique bronze sculpture by contemporary artist Chésade, dimensions are 58 × 65 × 9 cm (22.8 × 25.6 × 3.5 in). The sculpture is signed and comes with a certificate of authenticity. You can display this high relief bronze sculpture of a barnacle in flight on a stand or hang it on the wall. You could add smaller birds to finish the sculpture. The sculpture by Chésade is a part of this new "expressionist" movement. Despite the striking realism of these works of art, they are more motivated by a strong desire to convey the artist's or the animal's own subjective feelings than by a desire to trick the viewer's eyes. These almost naturalistic pieces of art display a clear aesthetic attention: the bronze is polished with vibrant, priceless, or understated patinas.
  • Creator:
    Chésade (1960, French)
  • Creation Year:
    Contemporary
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 22.84 in (58 cm)Width: 25.6 in (65 cm)Depth: 3.55 in (9 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    Paris, FR
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU803113819972

More From This Seller

View All
Flight V by Pierre Yermia - Animal bronze sculpture, bird
By Pierre Yermia
Located in Paris, FR
Flight V is a bronze sculpture by French contemporary artist Pierre Yermia, dimensions are 37 cm × 33 cm × 26 cm (14.6 × 13 × 10.2 in). The sculpture is signed and numbered, it is part of a limited edition of 8 editions + 4 artist’s proofs, and comes with a certificate of authenticity. "The theme of flight came about during my search...
Category

Early 2000s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Tuyau coq by Eric Valat - Animal bronze sculpture, bird, hose cock, nobility
By Eric Valat
Located in Paris, FR
Tuyau coq is a bronze sculpture by contemporary artist Eric Valat, dimensions are 50 × 30 × 20 cm (19.7 × 11.8 × 7.9 in). The sculpture is signed and numbered, it is part of a limit...
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Ibis by Chésade - Bronze sculpture of a bird, animal, sea wader
By Chésade
Located in Paris, FR
Ibis is a unique bronze sculpture by contemporary artist Chésade, dimensions are 26 × 26 × 12 cm / 10.2 × 10.2 × 4.7 in. The sculpture is signed and comes with a certificate of authe...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Flight VI by Pierre Yermia - Animal bronze sculpture, bird, grey patina, elegant
By Pierre Yermia
Located in Paris, FR
Flight VI is a bronze sculpture by French contemporary artist Pierre Yermia, dimensions are 32 × 34 × 32 cm (12.6 × 13.4 × 12.6 in). The sculpture is signed and numbered, it is part ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Two Ibis by Chésade - Bronze animal sculpture, birds, realistic, expressive
By Chésade
Located in Paris, FR
Two Ibis is a unique bronze sculpture by contemporary artist Chésade, dimensions are 25.5 × 38 × 21 cm (10 × 15 × 8.3 in). The sculpture is signed and comes with a certificate of au...
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Heron (Large) by Pierre Yermia - Animal sculpture, bronze, bird, outdoor, nature
By Pierre Yermia
Located in Paris, FR
Heron (Large) is a bronze sculpture by French contemporary artist Pierre Yermia, dimensions are 180 × 100 × 86 cm (70.9 × 39.4 × 33.9 in). The sculpture is signed and numbered, it i...
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

You May Also Like

Bronze Art Déco Représentant Une Oie, Les Ailes Déployées
Located in ROUEN, FR
Bronze Art Déco représentant une oie, les ailes déployées. Il est à fine patine brune. Socle en marbre vert. Signé de LUC. H.31 L.21.
Category

1920s French School Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Roofvogel Klein Prey Bird Small Bronze Sculpture Wild Animal Limited Edition
By Evert den Hartog
Located in Utrecht, NL
Roofvogel Klein Prey Bird Small Bronze Sculpture Wild Animal Limited Edition In Stock Evert den Hartog (born in Groot-Ammers, The Netherlands in 1949) followed his education to be a ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

''Water Bird'', Contemporary Bronze Sculpture Portrait of a Water Bird
By Ans Zondag
Located in Utrecht, NL
After studying Fine Art in the Netherlands Ans Zondag (1959) spent several years abroad in order to explore different artistic areas and to establish which ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Cheminement - Bronze Sculpture, Interior Sculpture, Belgian Artist, Woman Artist
By Isabelle Thiltgès
Located in New York, NY
A powerful meditation on the human journey, Cheminement by the late Belgian sculptor Isabelle Thiltgès captures a procession of stylized figures asce...
Category

Early 2000s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Pollès - Bronze Sculpture - Thelxinoé
Located in Collonge Bellerive, Geneve, CH
Pollès - Bronze Sculpture - Thelxinoé Bronze Edition: 1/4 2016 Dimensions: 28 x 21 x 20 cm Signed and Numbered BIOGRAPHY Pollès was born in Paris in 1945 Like Leonard de Vinci in an...
Category

2010s Contemporary Nude Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Bronze Heron Sculpture by Wayne F Williams
Located in Rochester, NY
Bronze heron by American sculptor Wayne Williams. Signed and dated 1993. Edition 2/2. Mounted on a walnut base. From Finger Lakes Magazine 2001: Art is everywhere in the Finger Lakes. Inspired by the region’s diverse scenery and lifestyles, artists pursue their creativity outdoors, in studios and in workshops. In the many well-established museums and galleries or at the newer fledgling arts organizations, a wide array of artistic styles and talents are represented. Often the artists, like Wayne Williams, share their artistic skill and passion through teaching at local colleges. Williams, who is retired after a 35-year career at Finger Lakes Community College, found his calling there. “I didn’t want to teach in public schools,” explains Williams of his career choice. “I wanted to be at the college level. CCFL (the Community College of the Finger Lakes, as it was then known) was literally creating a college, right from scratch.” The year was 1968 and Williams was charged with coordinating the new college’s art program. Rand Darrow, a CCFL student in that first year, remembers attending Williams’ art classes in a commercial building on Main Street just south of the railroad tracks in Canandaigua. Darrow appreciated his instructor’s relaxed manner. “He was a great teacher,” recalls Darrow, “cracking jokes all the time.” Darrow graduated with a major in Liberal Arts and continued on to SUNY Oswego where he earned a BA in fine arts. He taught art to elementary and middle school students for 30 years. These days Williams and Darrow typically cross paths at the Wayne County Arts Council in Newark where Williams and his wife, Marleen, are heavily involved. Williams offers classes in figure drawing and sculpture and hangs the gallery’s shows, including his former student’s “Slavic Tales of Novgorod” this past August. “I’d like to take a sculpture class from him,” says Darrow. In 2003 when Williams retired, the college honored him and another retiring art professor, Tom Insalaco, by renaming its art gallery the Williams-Insalaco Art Gallery. It was known formerly as Gallery 34 to recognize its origins at 34 North Main Street in Canandaigua. Williams held professor’s rank from 1976 and served as director of the art gallery beginning with its opening in 1983. Williams, who was born and raised in Newark, New York, says he began doing art at about age 8. By the time he was in junior high school his career direction seemed clear. He received local and national awards for his art and a scholarship to Syracuse University, from which he graduated in 1958 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in sculpture. He continued with graduate work at Syracuse, receiving an MFA in sculpture in 1962. He worked full time as a sculptor until he began teaching. At one point Williams admits he wanted to be a painter, but didn’t want to adopt the abstract expressionist style in vogue in the 1950s, preferring to pursue the realist tradition. He advises any would-be artist to “do what you do because you love it.” After graduation he traveled abroad, spending time in Belgium, the land of his ancestors. “My family’s name was originally Willems,” explains the 73-year old who still relishes the time spent in the Flemish countryside. Williams speaks excitedly about art, referencing the lives of great artists. He acknowledges that American artists do not have the same stature as those in Europe, where Old Masters like Brueghel and Rembrandt are national heroes. These days the energetic Williams, known primarily as a sculptor, is active at the Phelps Arts Center where he is on the board of directors. In mid-September when a group of visitors on a motor coach tour explored artworks displayed in the beautiful church-turned- gallery, they were treated to a large number of Williams’ bronze and metal sculptures, along with his charcoal drawings. “I’ve always loved his work because he deals with things, people, and animals you understand,” says the center’s Director Emeritus Marion Donnelly, who has known him for many years. Outside the Phelps Community Historical Society, Williams’ life-size figure of a farmer raises his pitchfork above a colorful flower garden on the front lawn. Inspired by the peasants working the fields in Europe, the metal figure is shown with wooden shoes. This is Williams’ largest copper piece, loaned to the Phelps museum in connection with Artistry in Sculpture, a community exhibition in 2009. Williams added a new base using a metal wagon...
Category

20th Century American Animal Sculptures

Materials

Bronze