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

David Kimball Anderson
Bronze and Steel Sculpture by David Kimball Anderson 'Poppy, Seeds'

2021

$7,500
£5,703.42
€6,578.62
CA$10,506.13
A$11,758.43
CHF 6,139.74
MX$143,453.57
NOK 77,935.91
SEK 73,956.38
DKK 49,126.01
Shipping
Retrieving quote...
The 1stDibs Promise:
Authenticity Guarantee,
Money-Back Guarantee,
24-Hour Cancellation

About the Item

'Poppy, Seeds' by David Kimball Anderson, 2021. Bronze, steel, and paint, 26 x 20 x 8 in. This sculpture features a square vase cast in bronze and finished with a grey patina. It features a series of white bulbs extending from bronze branches, a painted green leaf hanging from a bent stem, and a steel flower painted in bright orange. Throughout his forty-five-year career, David Kimball Anderson’s sculpture has been described as “a contemplation on the meaning of things that give beauty and pleasure.” Anderson’s life-sized, three-dimensional floral steel and bronze still life sculptures, contained in square or rounded shaped vases, incorporate spheres that are configured to astronomical transits occurring seasonally in the heavens. These still-life constructions, minimalistic in style, reinforce Anderson’s life-long pursuit of merging his spiritual practice with his nature-based artwork. David Kimball Anderson has received a Pollack-Krasner Foundation Grant, three NEA Arts Fellowships, and a California State University Research Grant. His work is in the collections of: Albright Knox Gallery, Buffalo, NY, National Endowment for the Arts, the World Bank, Art in Embassies, Washington, DC, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA, Oakland Museum, Oakland, CA, San Antonio Museum of Art, San Antonio, TX; New Mexico Museum of Art, Santa Fe, NM, Albuquerque Museum and the City of Albuquerque, NM. From 1967-1971, he attended the San Francisco Art Institute.
  • Creator:
    David Kimball Anderson (1946, American)
  • Creation Year:
    2021
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 26 in (66.04 cm)Width: 20 in (50.8 cm)Depth: 8 in (20.32 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    White Plains, NY
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU373310178982

More From This Seller

View All
Bronze and Steel Sculpture by David Kimball Anderson 'Seeds'
By David Kimball Anderson
Located in White Plains, NY
'Seeds' by David Kimball Anderson, 2022. Bronze, steel, and paint, 24 x 8 x 6 in. This sculpture features a classic rounded vase cast in bronze and finished with a grey patina. It fe...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Still-life Sculptures

Materials

Bronze, Steel

Bronze and Steel Sculpture by David Kimball Anderson 'Green Bottle Ochre Seeds'
By David Kimball Anderson
Located in White Plains, NY
'Green Bottle Ochre Seeds' by David Kimball Anderson, 2022. Bronze, steel, and paint, 16 x 6 x 5 in. This sculpture features a square vase cast in bronze a...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Still-life Sculptures

Materials

Bronze, Steel

Bronze and steel sculpture by David Kimball Anderson 'Untitled 1'
By David Kimball Anderson
Located in White Plains, NY
'Untitled 1' by David Kimball Anderson, 2021. Bronze, steel, and paint, 18 x 8 x 8 in. This sculpture features a rounded vase cast in bronze and finished in patinas of grey. It featu...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Realist Still-life Sculptures

Materials

Bronze, Steel

Bronze & Steel Sculpture by David Kimball Anderson 'Planets, Seeds, Nasturtium'
By David Kimball Anderson
Located in White Plains, NY
'Planets, Seeds, Nasturtium' by David Kimball Anderson, 2022. Bronze, steel, and paint, 36 x 17 x 10 in. This sculpture features a rounded vase cast in bronze and finished in patinas...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Still-life Sculptures

Materials

Bronze, Steel

Bronze and Steel Sculpture by David Kimball Anderson 'Planet Purple Zinnia'
By David Kimball Anderson
Located in White Plains, NY
'Planet Purple Zinnia' by David Kimball Anderson, 2022. Bronze, steel, and paint, 7 x 6 x 4 in. This sculpture features a rounded square vase cast in bronze and finished with a green...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Still-life Sculptures

Materials

Bronze, Steel

Bronze and Steel Sculpture, 'Silver Water Bottle with Flower and Yarrow'
By David Kimball Anderson
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Silver Water Bottle with Flower and Yarrow' by David Kimball Anderson, 2023. Bronze, steel, and paint, 27 x 8 x 8 in. This sculpture features a...
Category

2010s Contemporary Still-life Sculptures

Materials

Bronze, Steel

You May Also Like

"Rain Forest" bronze and stone sculpture
Located in Glen Ellen, CA
Rebecca Johnson's "Rain Forest" sculpture springs from the idea of rain as life-giving, with a plump cast bronze raindrop stretching skyward and sprout...
Category

2010s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

Materials

Stone, Bronze

"Still Life" Bronze Sculpture Signed Phillips
By Phillips
Located in Palm Desert, CA
This monumental abstract sculpture stands on a pedestal at 67" high. Comprised of 5 large shapes, it is signed "Phillips '85" and entitled "Still Life". The bronze has a nice patina ...
Category

Vintage 1980s American Mid-Century Modern Abstract Sculptures

Materials

Bronze

9-Envol - Giovanni Gelmi - contemporary patinated Steel Corten sculpture
Located in DE
A stunning and dynamic contemporary sculpture crafted from patinated corten steel, perfect for both indoor and outdoor spaces. This exquisite piece is designed to elevate any environ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Abstract Sculptures

Materials

Steel

Claude Viseux, Abstract Sculpture, 1975, Steel
By Claude Viseux
Located in SAINT-SEVER, FR
Claude Viseux est un peintre, sculpteur et graveur aquafortiste et lithographe français né le 3 juillet 1927 à Champagne-sur-Oise et mort le 9 novembre 2008 à Anglet. 'est dans les années 1959-1960 que la sculpture de Claude Viseux, qualifiée de « protéiforme, onirique, fantastique » — ami de Max Ernst, Man Ray, Francis Ponge et Henri Michaux, il ne désavoue pas une parenté avec le Surréalisme9 — se substitue à la peinture, ses premières réalisations étant les objets trouvés en bord de mer qu'il pétrifie dans la cire10 d'une part, les empreintes de pierres et d'algues coulées en bronze d'autre part. En 1960, il signe le Manifeste des 121 titré « Déclaration sur le droit à l’insoumission dans la guerre d’Algérie ». En 1961, ses expérimentations s'orientent vers les corps organiques, notamment avec sa série Ostéales constituée d'assemblages d'os fossilisés qu'il patine ou au contraire décape, qu'il visse, scie, assemble et plastifie. Les Concrétudes ou Coulées directes qui suivent en 1961-1962 sont obtenues à partir de coulées de métal en fusion dans le sable, générant des reliefs qu'il soude sur des plaques d'acier. Il va cependant adopter rapidement l'acier inoxydable — qu'il est avec Pol Bury parmi les premiers à employer en sculpture — comme matériau de prédilection. « Il assemble divers rebus industriels — tuyaux, écrous, boulons, cuves… — pour créer des sculptures à mi-chemin du mécanique et du biologique » restitue ainsi Sophie Serra11. Claude Viseux, qui fréquente alors Jean Tinguely, Piotr Kowalski, Michel Guino, Takis et César, confirme : « Ma récupération de l'élément industriel s'élargit vers les aciers spéciaux, avec un essai de vocabulaire formel : des barres, des profilés, des sphères, des rotules, des fonds de cuves, des chambres à combustion de Boeing, des tubulures, des soupapes de navire »9. « L'artiste entre au cœur de la réalité industrielle, prospecte dans les chaînes de montage de Renault et rôde dans les terrains vaques autour des usines », restitue donc l'encyclopédie Les Muses : « il récupère ferrailles, pièces détachées, débris de voitures, vieux châssis, toute une série d'éléments devenus inutiles. Ils les assemblent, tels quels, sans les modifier. Des créatures agressives ou pathétiques vont surgir de ce combat physique et dialectique que l'artiste livre avec la matière et entrer dans le domaine d'une poétique étrange, surnaturelle5 ». Dans les années 1967-1970, Les « structures actives » en acier inoxydable procèdent ainsi de la production industrielle de série. Elles se répartissent en familles de formes combinatoires composées par addition, soustraction, multiplication, division. Il confirme : « le monde industriel est ma nature, mon bouillon de culture, où je cherche des corps, des familles de corps, des genres, des espèces, dans un aller-retour de l'artificiel au naturel pour confondre les règnes, pour en inventer d'autres selon une géométrie organique qui féconde les différents types de structures, qui aménage la forme concernée par la forme à venir »9. En 1968, Claude Viseux s'installe à la villa Baudran à Arcueil, atelier qu'il conservera jusqu'en 1992. Si des corps imaginaires naissent ainsi des pièces mécaniques que Claude Viseux emprunte à l'automobile, à l'avion et au bateau, en 1972, « la symétrie de ces formes pures en inox », constate Lydia Harambourg, « l'amène à s'interroger sur la notion d'équilibre instable »12. Ses Instables sont de la sorte exposés à la Biennale de Venise en 1972 où, rappelle encore Lydia Harambourg, une salle entière est consacrée « aux dessins qui reprennent son vocabulaire mécanique identitaire de sphères, toupies, hélices, anneaux, astrolabes et balanciers »12. Les Instables sont de même, en 1973, présentés à la galerie Le Point cardinal à Paris où Claude Viseux avait déjà exposé en 1968 avec Henri Michaux et Joaquin Ferrer...
Category

Vintage 1970s French Abstract Sculptures

Materials

Bronze, Steel

David Kimball Anderson Sculpture Flowers in a Vase
By David Kimball Anderson
Located in Surfside, FL
David Kimball Anderson’s work is bold and graceful, respectful and spiritual. A practicing Buddhist and avid surfer as well as a sculptor, Anderson has given way to 4 decades of work that revere beauty in nature and beauty in industry within his signature aesthetic. For Anderson, steel girders, dry leaves, machine parts and distant train lights are equally as compelling as strawberry flowers, begonias, Asian antiquities and the night sky. Editing down to essential form while adding a touch of embellishment allows his work to embody both minimalist formal truth and decorative adornment. Anderson’s art practice is a beauty-driven way of knowing the world. In this sculpture David Kimball Anderson assembles an arrangement of Metal artifacts...
Category

1980s Contemporary Still-life Sculptures

Materials

Bronze, Enamel, Steel

Buttercups hand-forged in iron
By Ivan Zanoni
Located in Milan, IT
The strength that springs from the ground has been miniralised by Ivan Zanoni's sculptures. Three buttercups forged in wrought iron rise from eternity, preserving their fragile and ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Naturalistic Figurative Sculptures

Materials

Iron