Sculptures
Arno Breker is an artist supported by the Nazi regime and a German sculptor whose neoclassical works meet the military aesthetic of the regime. Breker was born on July 29, 1900, in Elberfeld, Germany and enrolled at the Düsseldorf Art Academy. He left his studies in 1924, moved to Paris and met avant-garde artists such as Jean Cocteau, Jean Renoir and Pablo Picasso. Over time, Breker rejects the influence of surrealism and cubism to pursue a more conservative aesthetic. He returns to Germany when the Nazi regime comes to power, praised by Adolf Hitler who describes his work as powerful and full of will. His sculptures often present the ideal figure of the Aryan man and are exhibited at the 1936 Olympic Games and the entrance of the Reich Chancellery. After the Second World War, his work was denounced as fascist and fell out of favor. However, there is renewed enthusiasm for his works at the opening of the Arno Breker Museum in Nörvenich, Germany, in 1985, later renamed the European Art Museum following numerous events. Breker died on February 13, 1991, in Düsseldorf, Germany.
1970s German Post-Modern Vintage Sculptures
Marble, Bronze
1960s French Modern Vintage Sculptures
Marble, Bronze
1970s Spanish Mid-Century Modern Vintage Sculptures
Paint, Paper
2010s Spanish Modern Sculptures
Wool
Late 20th Century American Modern Sculptures
Marble, Bronze
2010s Spanish Modern Sculptures
Sheepskin, Upholstery, Lacquer
2010s Spanish Modern Sculptures
Brass
21st Century and Contemporary Spanish Sculptures
Brass
1980s Spanish Vintage Sculptures
Bronze
2010s Spanish Post-Modern Sculptures
Brass
2010s Spanish Post-Modern Sculptures
Brass
Early 2000s Italian Modern Sculptures
Bronze
2010s Spanish Post-Modern Sculptures
Plastic
1980s German Modern Vintage Sculptures
Marble, Bronze