Kurt Arentz:
Necklace "Attacking Bull", gold-plated version
Kurt Arentz:
Necklace "Attacking Bull", gold-plated version

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gold-plated 925 sterling silver | pendant 4 x 2 cm (w/h) | chain length 45 cm

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Product no. IN-746290

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Necklace "Attacking Bull", gold-plated version
Kurt Arentz: Necklace "Attacking Bull", gold-plated version

Detailed description

Necklace "Attacking Bull", gold-plated version

The famous animal sculptures by the sculptor Kurt Arentz seem so real because they are not committed to an obsession with detail but to a precise depiction of what is typical of each animal. And so they do not lose their effect even when they are reduced to miniature. Even as pendants, they show Arentz's finesse between depiction and abstraction and are real "character pieces".

Necklace "Attacking Bull": It seems like a symbol of stubbornness, which gives way to lust for battle. A piece of jewellery that radiates unbroken vitality. Pendant in 24-carat gold-plated 925 sterling silver, 4 x 2 cm (w/h), with a 45 cm long chain.

Portrait of the artist Kurt Arentz

About Kurt Arentz

1934-2014

The German sculptor and painter was born in 1934 in Cologne, as the son of an old-established Bergisch artisan family. He initially learned a trade but then found his own artistic path from 1979 onwards.

At first, he created still lifes in oil and pastel as well as portraits in bronze of celebrities such as Franz Josef Strauß or Herbert von Karajan. Later, he focused mainly on animal motifs emphasising the typical character of each species. As a remarkable self-taught artist, Kurt Arentz found his very own artistic form concept. Beyond academic experiments, but also far from all naturalistic platitudes, he shaped symbols of vital nature with his hands. His ideals of a still-intact world transport us as if into the wilderness. Arentz abstracted the animal as a being in itself. In doing so, he succeeded in placing his works in an era of timeless validity.

For his works, Kurt Arentz used a special silicone rubber process that allowed for the immediate realisation of his ideas. The bronze cast was then signed with the artist's very own signature. In the final work step, the surfaces of the metal were polished, roughened or patinated, thus acquiring their motif-typical characteristics.

The sculptor has already presented his works to a large audience in numerous exhibitions in Germany and France. On his 70th birthday on May 30, 2004, Kurt Arentz was congratulated by former chancellor of Germany Helmut Kohl and former German President Roman Herzog. Arentz was used to receiving frequent acknowledgements and tributes from celebrities: Other fellow statesmen such as Willy Brandt, Ronald Reagan or George Bush Sr., as well as Sir Peter Ustinov and Willy Millowitsch, had their portraits painted by Kurt Arentz.

Nevertheless, Kurt Arentz's great mastery is evident in his animal sculptures. He is considered one of the most significant animal sculptors of the 20th century. In 2001, Arentz was awarded the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany for his artistic and social commitment. His sculptures are housed in places such as the White House, Washington, and the Museum of European Art in New York.

Like no other, he succeeded in reaching the very essence of the animal and depicting it. The great popularity of these nature studies lies in their strong expressiveness, but also in their carefree cheerfulness: Arentz's creative energy is joy in life.

Kurt Arentz lived and worked in Leverkusen. He passed away in June 2014.

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