Ernst Barlach:
Sculpture "The Singing Man" (1928), reduction in bronze, height 20 cm
Ernst Barlach:
Sculpture "The Singing Man" (1928), reduction in bronze, height 20 cm

Quick info

ars mundi Exclusive Edition | limited, 980 copies | bronze | numbered | signature | foundry stamp | certificate | reduction | size 20 x 20 x 14 cm (w/h/d)

Product no. IN-486922
Sculpture "The Singing Man" (1928), reduction in bronze, height 20 cm
Ernst Barlach: Sculpture "The Singing Man" (1928), reduct...

Detailed description

Sculpture "The Singing Man" (1928), reduction in bronze, height 20 cm

"The Singing Man" is completely absorbed. He listens to himself with his eyes closed. The singer seems completely relaxed, concentrated and devoted: He is devoted to the singing and the opening of his gaze from within. The liberating effect of the music gives him serenity, devotion and contemplation.

Sculpture moulded directly from the original and reduced in size (reduction). Fine bronze, cast by hand using the Lost-Wax-Process. Size 20 x 20 x 14 cm (w/h/d). Limited edition of 980 copies, individually numbered and with the signature "E. Barlach" taken from the original as well as the foundry hallmark. ars mundi Exclusive Edition, published in cooperation with the Ernst Barlach Society. With numbered certificate of authenticity and limitation.

Portrait of the artist Ernst Barlach

About Ernst Barlach

1870-1938, sculptor, writer and draughtsman

Ernst Barlach was born on January 2, 1870, in Wedel, Germany, and died on October 24, 1938, in Rostock, Germany. He holds an outstandingly special position within German Expressionism. As a graphic artist, draughtsman, writer and, in particular, a sculptor, Barlach created milestones in art history. Barlach's sculptural works of art have a special effect because they seek extreme experience of limits and their representation. They are works of multi-layered meaning with which he foregrounded the essence of the human being and that what stands above the self and the world.

Barlach's intention is rooted in the depths, the inner self. Shaped by war and challenging living conditions, he experiences both suffering and happiness. The human being is always the focus of his work: Ecce homo.

"I desire nothing more than to be a good and true artist as best I can. I believe that what cannot be expressed through the work can pass into the possession of another through forms. My pleasure and creative impulse continually revolve around the problems of the meaning of life and the other great mountains in the spiritual realm." (Ernst Barlach)

Ernst Barlach became an honorary member of the Academy of Fine Arts, Munich, in 1925. In 1933, he was appointed Knight of the Peace Class of the Order "Pour le mérite". In 1937, the National Socialists removed his works from public collections and spaces for being "degenerate art". Ernst Barlach died in Rostock on October 24, 1938.

Today, Ernst Barlach's works are an integral part of leading museums and collections and - if available - fetch record amounts at auction.

"The Singing Man" became Ernst Barlach's best-known sculpture, an icon of Modernism. It adorns illustrated books and posters worldwide, and the original edition is a permanent part of the collections of the world's major museums, including the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York.

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