Description: Bronze Figure of a Korean Girl by Eudald Serra i Güell, circa 1940. A heavily cast bronze figure of a standing young girl in traditional Korean Hanbok dress consiting of a jeogori jacket and a long chima skirt. Her long hair ibraided into a single plait. The textural style is similar to Japanese sword cut carvings with a subtle angularity of design. Most likely this figural bronze was cast in the artist’s studio in Kobe, Japan around 1940. Etched signature on the back corner of the long skirt: “E.SERRA” Excellent condition. 11.5 in. high x 4.5 in. wide x 4 in. deep. (292 x 115 x 102mm) 6lbs. (2708g.) Circa 1940. Provenance: Laura Green Odell (1922-2021), New York David Killen (1960-2023), New York Artist Bio: Eudald Serra i Güell, Barcelona (1911-2002) A Spanish sculptor and ethnologist who was part of the pre-war Catalan artistic avant-garde, with the ADLAN group (Friends of Art Nouveau). He studied at the Escola d’Arts i Oficis Llotja, where he was a student of Ángel Ferrant. In 1935, he went to Japan, where he became involved in ceramics, through Hamada Shoji, and he staged a number of exhibitions which won various awards. He lived in Kobe until 1948. His interest in other cultures began during his trip to the island of Hokkaido in 1947, in the service of the United States army, during which he modelled busts of the Ainu inhabitants of the land, an activity which he defined as “plastic anthropology” and which was a constant in all of his journeys. In 1949, back in Barcelona, he came into contact with August Panyella and began his collaboration with the Museu Etnològic i de Cultures del Món. There he built the collection of Japanese ceramics for the museum. He later met Albert Folch. They formed a close friendship. Serra worked with the ceramicist Llorenç Artigas, he was part of the Escola d’Altamira avant-garde group and he won the Sculpture Award at the Hispano-American Art Biennial in 1952. His work can be seen in various public spaces in Barcelona and in a number of museums, as well as on the façade of the Museu Etnològic de Barcelona building. Serra was also a teacher, a profession he left on becoming the curator of Albert Folch's collections. He collaborated with the museum, taking part in various expeditions with August Panyella, and making several exploratory trips alone to prepare future expeditions, during which he acquired objects for the museum on behalf of the City Council. He made other expeditions in the company of Panyella and Albert Folch, or sometimes only with the latter. In the case of the expeditions financed by Folch, he was in charge of preparations and planning: he made the preliminary explorations, travelled beforehand to the various destinations and carried out the selection and purchasing of the objects. His interest in the objects was motivated by something other than strictly anthropological or ethnographic reasons, and always began from the perspective of plastic experience. He published various works, some with Folch. On the death of Albert Folch, he was named director of the Folch Foundation.
Price: 2500 USD
Location: Palm Springs, California
End Time: 2024-12-18T00:57:12.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: Serra
Unit of Sale: Single Piece
Signed By: E. Serra
Size: Small
Signed: Yes
Period: Showa
Material: Bronze
Item Length: 5 in
Region of Origin: Japan
Subject: Figures
Type: Sculpture
Format: Statue
Year of Production: 1940
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Item Height: 11 in
Style: Figurative Art, Modernism, Portraiture
Theme: Domestic & Family Life, People, Portrait
Features: One of a Kind (OOAK)
Production Technique: Bronze Casting
Country/Region of Manufacture: Japan
Culture: Korean
Item Width: 4 in
Handmade: Yes
Time Period Produced: 1925-1949