Valerie Otte:
Sculpture "Energy", bronze
Valerie Otte:
Sculpture "Energy", bronze

Quick info

limited, 49 copies | numbered | signed | bronze + wood | patinated | size total 19.5 x 10 x 7 cm (h/w/d) | weight 0.9 kg

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Product no. IN-894402

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Sculpture "Energy", bronze
Valerie Otte: Sculpture "Energy", bronze

Detailed description

Sculpture "Energy", bronze

In her latest sculptural work, Valerie Otte succeeds in giving emotions a material form. In her sensitive bronze portraits, she provides intimate insights into the human soul.

Sculpture in fine bronze, cast by hand using the Lost-Wax-Process and patinated reddish. On a pedestal of walnut wood. Limited edition of 49 copies, numbered and signed. Size incl. pedestal 19.5 x 10 x 7 cm (h/w/d). Size pedestal 4 x 10 x 6 cm (h/w/d). Weight 0.9 kg.

This object is part of the following sets

Portrait of the artist Valerie Otte

About Valerie Otte

Insight into the human soul

Otte's art can be described as a play of the eyes at distance, which is a classical description for figurative sculpture. The rule: Close observation. In her works, the artist translates everything that she saw in the world as a quiet emotion, a small gesture or a moment of truthfulness. The viewer then "reads" these traces cast in bronze and soon no longer sees mere sculptures but personalities. It is a game that educates - not only for art but also for the world.

Valerie Otte (born in 1977) studied sculpture and art history in London and Berlin. She followed up with a diploma in product design in Potsdam – this path describes perfectly the approach and versatility of her work.

Otte's work as a sculptor in her Berlin studio is primarily figurative. Her bronze figures are rarely actually portraits (although she has made and continues to make some portraits from models). They are sensitive character studies of great emotional and psychological depth, which allow the viewer an insight into their inner lives without exaggerated "posing", simply through quiet suggestion and barely perceptible gesture. In the process, Otte's figures usually rest within themselves so that the viewer almost believes witnessing an intimate moment.

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