Jagna Weber:
Sculpture pair "Duck and Drake", bonded bronze version
Jagna Weber:
Sculpture pair "Duck and Drake", bonded bronze version

Quick info

ars mundi Exclusive Edition | limited, 199 copies each | numbered | signed | bonded bronze | duck: size 17 x 26 x 12.5 cm (w/h/d), weight 4.2 kg | drake: size 30 x 37 x 20.5 cm (w/h/d), weight 9.65 kg

incl. tax plus Shipping

Product no. IN-768748

Delivery time: Immediately deliverable

Sculpture pair "Duck and Drake", bonded bronze version
Jagna Weber: Sculpture pair "Duck and Drake", bonded bron...

Detailed description

Sculpture pair "Duck and Drake", bonded bronze version

Jagna Weber's work is characterised by a restrained abstraction of forms, which - as with this drake and duck - nevertheless preserve the figurative shape of the objects. The "emotional content" of the scene is even more expressive: a gallant gentleman is unmistakably courting a shy, reserved beauty.

Two sculptures "Duck and Drake": Edition in bonded bronze, cast by hand, with bronzed surfaces. Limited edition of 199 copies each, numbered and signed. Exclusively at ars mundi. Not weatherproof, therefore only suitable for indoor use. Duck: size 17 x 26 x 12.5 cm (w/h/d). Weight 4.2 kg. Drake: size 30 x 37 x 20.5 cm (w/h/d). Weight 9.65 kg.

About Jagna Weber

Jagna Weber, born in Düsseldorf, Germany, in 1962, studied at the Kunsthochschule in Kassel from 1987 to 1993 with the professors Manfred Bluth and Kurt Haug. Her first exhibitions, initially in the Hessian region, followed immediately. Very quickly, however, her works were in demand both nationally and internationally, and as early as 2001, Weber reached the final round of the International Sculpture Biennale in Toyamura, Japan. Since then, her works have been closely followed by art connoisseurs at home and abroad.

Weber is a versatile sculptor who has mastered various areas of sculptural art. Her original animal sculptures, for which she does not abandon the figurative, even slightly abstracting the model, always attract particular interest. In this way, she always captures the "essence" of the animal depicted, even inscribing a "personality" on it in a thoroughly humorous way.

Recommendations