Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 10

Paul Braslow
Voice Of My Beloved Large Bronze Sculpture

1978

More From This Seller

View All
Bronze Bowl With Marble and Wood Sculpture
Located in Lake Worth Beach, FL
Bronze Marble Wood Sculpture Four separate pieces, unsigned artist Sarah Schwartz was born 1953 Chicago, Illinois. Education: 1971-72 York University/Ontario College of Art, Toronto...
Category

1980s American Modern Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Marble, Bronze

Dancing Ballerinas Bronze Sculpture
By Victor Salmones
Located in Lake Worth Beach, FL
Bronze Sculpture Dencing Ballerinas. Victor Salmones (Mexican, 1938-1989) "'Pas de Quatre" Edition 1 of 10, 1976, 26 x 11 3/4 x 9 7/8 in. This sculpture was originally created and ...
Category

1970s Modern Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Marble, Bronze

Botero Style Bronze Horse Sculpture
Located in Lake Worth Beach, FL
Botero Style Bronze Horse Sculpture Large and decorative bronze horse with removable saddle Botero style inspired, quality patinated bronze with some red and black trace of paint.
Category

2010s Modern Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Petite Cuirasse Bronze Torso Sculpture
By Igor Mitoraj
Located in Lake Worth Beach, FL
Petite Cuirasse Bronze Torso Sculpture Igot Mitoraj (Polish, 1944-2014) signed in the mold, from an unnumbered edition of 1500 bronze with gilt patina on lucite base. Dimensions of...
Category

1970s Modern Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Bust Of A Woman Roberto Cortazar
By Roberto Cortazar
Located in Lake Worth Beach, FL
Bust of a Woman, bronze sculptue. Bronze with dark brown patina signed on the back R. Cortazar 1/9. Originally from Tapachula, Chiapas Mexico, he was b...
Category

1990s Modern Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

Bust Of A Young Woman bronze
By Kevin Berlin
Located in Lake Worth Beach, FL
Bust Of A Young Woman Bronze sculpture signed by the artist inside the cast and dated 1988, 1st cast in London. Kevin Berlin is an international arti...
Category

1980s American Modern Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

You May Also Like

Sun Worship - Figurative Human Sculpture: Cast Bronze & Portland Stone
By Sara Ingleby-Mackenzie
Located in London, GB
ed.3/10 Currently based in Frome, Somerset, Sara Ingleby-Mackenzie graduated with a First Class Honours Degree in Sculpture from the Bath Academy of Art. Having studied under Ken Hu...
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Limestone, Bronze

Abstract Signed Cubist Bronze Sculpture "Cats" Chicago Bauhaus Woman Modernist
Located in Surfside, FL
This listing is just for the sculpture. (the picture of the ad is for reference and is not included.) Marie Zoe Greene-Mercier was an artist, writer and arts activist who worked in t...
Category

1960s Cubist Abstract Sculptures

Materials

Travertine, Bronze

Committed - 38" tall bronze sculpture
By Denny Haskew
Located in Loveland, CO
"Committed" maquette by Denny Haskew Cast ​Bronze on Travertine and Walnut Base Signed and Numbered AP/25* 38"h 15"w 10"d *This limited edition is sold out, the available piece is t...
Category

Early 2000s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Travertine, Bronze

Listening, bronze sculpture, portrait of child, travertine base, contemporary
By Troy Williams
Located in Santa Fe, NM
Listening, bronze sculpture, childs portrait, limestone base, contemporary limited edition bronze
Category

2010s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Travertine, Bronze

Harmony by Helle Crawford, Bronze sculpture of a mother and daughter
By Helle Rask Crawford
Located in DE
Bronze sculpture of a horse carrying a woman - The sculpture portrays the love and intimate harmony between horse and girl. About the Gallery: Folly and Muse was established in 2015...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Limestone, Bronze

First Bite, female figure holding apple, garden of eden, bronze sculpture Williams
By Troy Williams
Located in Santa Fe, NM
First Bite,female figure holding apple,garden of eden,bronze sculpture Williams First Bite, female figure holding apple, garden of eden, bronze sculpture Expressing Situations and Beings in Human Form Sculptor Troy Williams unites the timeless and the contemporary in sculptures of rare beauty and meaning Beyond all the narrative potential of the three obvious physical dimensions of Troy Williams’ sculpture there are many other considerations that contribute greatly to the enjoyment, appreciation, and understanding of his entrancing 360-degree works of figurative art. Among these are the emotional responses and intellectual interpretations that first go into the artist’s creative process and then into every subsequent spectator’s viewings at least somewhat differently each time. Some artists insist on leaving these entirely up to each viewer, but Williams is glad to enrich the experience by inviting the viewer in for a little insight into the artist’s intention. Certain ambiguities and unintended provocations might otherwise arise, as Williams uses original combinations of materials or ideas in highly original ways. For the sophisticated clientele of Glenn Green Galleries Williams specializes in figurative and facial sculptures hewn from fallen woods he finds while running near his home in the mountains of north central New Mexico. Williams has in the past worked with exotic woods, but now avoids them in a desire to protect the people, plants, and animals that depend on a vibrant, healthy, and unexploited local ecosystems. Finding dead and downed wood also introduces an element of serendipitous chance into the sculptor’s process of selection and inspiration. Nature provides an exquisite mass of workable solids, surfaces, patterns, and curves in cottonwood and the many varieties of juniper this sculptor favors. Troy Williams simply rescues these from the elements and then elevates them to timeless treasures by relating them to themes that express our deepest nature. Awake to the most beautiful twists, turns, and striations already present in these found mediums, Williams is naturally and passionately drawn to every stage of freeing the underlying sculpture. Following the wood’s ingrained tendencies is always a creative guide for Williams. Growing up in an Indiana farming community, his dad a family practice doctor and his mother an artist, Troy has always felt an affinity for the earth and especially its mountains. He initially came west to study agriculture at Fort Lewis College in Durango, Colorado, attracted there by a setting where his athletic nature could find full expression. His interest in an agriculture career gave way to his love of the mountains. In order to continue living in them and enjoy the hiking, climbing, and running he also loved, Troy worked for several years in a solar business, progressing from manufacturing to installations to design. On a fortuitous errand for a cousin back home, Troy happened into silversmithing and began producing simple, hammered ear cuffs. At this point the artistic nature that he had earlier suppressed in favor of athletics began to emerge strongly, and he expanded into more complex designs as he learned and mastered goldsmithing and lapidary. Another quantum leap occurred when he made his first copper face for a pendant. He couldn’t wait to see the face on a larger scale and was eager for the challenge of learning another art. He began sculpting metal, then stone, then came upon wood as his medium of choice. Wood had immediate allure: scented, expanding, contracting, and seeming to breathe. Williams was seduced by its warmth, the play of light on the complexion of its grain, and the inherent life force so evident in wood. He also learned to coax creative advantage from some of wood’s pitfalls, like soft spots, tricky grains composed of woody xylem and softer phloem; and to avoid the conditions that make it splinter. A quality of segmentation or fragmentation characterizes Williams’s sculptures and provides great visual satisfaction along with intriguing thematic provocation. One is struck by the beautiful outlines that might never be apparent had Williams not removed segments or created interior voids expressly to reveal them. When sculpting a face, Williams focuses on aspects that are mask-like, floating, and alive with contours that might not be visible were the artist to sculpt the full head. The segmentation in his exquisitely refined female figurative works incorporates solids, hollows, and curvilinear elements for reasons that are at once artistic, philosophical, and experiential. Besides attending basic college art classes, to understand more fully the human figure, Troy spent a summer in Europe...
Category

Early 2000s Contemporary Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Limestone, Bronze

Recently Viewed

View All