A Woman's Face with two hands
A Woman's Face with two hands
Published 2017-02-17T19:42:16+00:00
In this exquisite ceramic, Leger presents a beautiful female visage which is partly hidden and slightly framed by the subject’s hands. It is an intriguing and engaging ceramic piece – the background is a vibrant orange while the details of the woman’s face and hands are outlined in a contrasting black. According to Y. Brunhammer (2005), “The first low reliefs of 1950-52 were inspired by paintings and still lifes painted in 1936, 1937 and 1938 in strongly contrasted colours, in which the object and colour had replaced the ‘subject’ inherited from the Renaissance. These were the years that Léger was exploring mural decoration with his architect friends Robert Mallet-Steves, Le Corbusier, Charlotte Perriand, and later Paul Nelson, who had moved to Paris, for the Hanging House in 1939. His ceramic work was due to an unusual affinity with Roland Brice, who had moved to Biot in 1949 to work full-time on pottery” (132).
I printed this at 50% to reduce print time but the time, weight and dimensions have been adjusted to full size. Printed easily without support.
Date published | 17/02/2017 |
Time to do | 200 - 280 minutes |
Material Quantity | 112 |
Dimensions | 114x130x16 |
Technology | FDM |
Complexity | Medium |
Support Free | YES |
Title | A Woman's Face with two hands |
Date | 1954 |
Dimension | 18 5/8 in x 13 1/4 in x 2 3/4 in (47.3 cm x 33.7 cm x 7 cm) |
Accession | FL 54 |
Period | Modern Art |
Medium | Chamotte, Glazed enamel |
Artist | Fernand Léger |
Place | Pushkin Museum |