The Met Store Seated Female Nude Sculpture

Prodotto
67.95 USD Examine the detailed sheet with complete information, compare prices and find features for The Met Store Seated Female Nude Sculpture, on sale at the price of 67.95 USD; it belongs to the Decoration category; the production is handled by The Met Store, and the sale is managed by The Met Store Seated Female Nude Sculpture.

Our miniature reproduction is based on an original sculpture (ca. 1600) by an unknown French or Franco-Flemish artist and now in the collection of the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna.

EAN: 0885118189195
Shipping Cost: 7.95 USD
Availability: in stock
Delivery Time: 3-8 days
Condition: new

Compare Similar Products

The Met Store Statue of Aphrodite Sculpture The Met Store Statue of Aphrodite Sculpture 357.95 USD A beautiful marble sculpture of Aphrodite in the Museum's collection was made in Imperial Rome (1st or 2nd century A. D.) as a copy of a Greek statue of the third or second century B. C. In this work, the goddess of love is shown as though surprised at her bath. Originally, her arms reached forward to shield her body in a gesture that both concealed and accentuated her sexuality. Our beautiful reproduction of the Museum's Aphrodite was created with a combination of three-dimensional imaging and traditional sculpture techniques.
The Met Store Auguste Rodin: Adam Sculpture The Met Store Auguste Rodin: Adam Sculpture 502.95 USD The Museum's Adamwas cast in bronze about 1910 from Auguste Rodin's (French, 1840-1917) original 1880 model. Based on this work, our reduced-scale reproduction was created with a combination of three-dimensional imaging and traditional sculpture techniques. Click
The Met Store Statuette of a Hippopotamus Sculpture The Met Store Statuette of a Hippopotamus Sculpture 75.95 USD Ceramic Hippopotamus Sculpture Since its arrival at The Met in 1917, the charming Egyptian hippopotamus figurine affectionately known as "William©" (ca. 1961-1878 BCE) has been a Museum favorite. Like the original statuette, our reproduction is decorated with drawings of lotus blossoms and marsh plants, symbols of life and rebirth and a nod to the hippo's habitat along the shallow banks of the Nile River.
The Met Store Figure of a Parrot Sculpture The Met Store Figure of a Parrot Sculpture 402.95 USD Skilled metalworkers in India have for centuries created courtly objects of distinction in a variety of styles, materials, and techniques. One such brass object in the Museum's collection is in the shape of a graceful parrot (Indian, late 18th century), delicately perched on one leg, which may have been used as a finial. Our delightful parrot figure, crafted of hand- patinated bonded bronze, is based on the original brass parrot.
The Met Store Small Egyptian Cat Sculpture The Met Store Small Egyptian Cat Sculpture 52.95 USD Our reproduction is based on an ancient Egyptian statuette of a cat (664-30 BCE) from the Late Period-Ptolemaic Period, now in the Museum's collection. The original cat figure sits on a menat-shaped base with its tail wrapped along its right side. In its subtle modeling and stylized features, the sculptor has captured the lithe aloofness and dignity characteristic of the feline, which served as the zoomorphic form of the powerful protective goddess Bastet. A collar is engraved around the neck, from which is suspended an wedjat-eye pectoral for protection and well-being.
The Met Store Cycladic Head Sculpture The Met Store Cycladic Head Sculpture 352.95 USD This strikingly abstract sculpture was reproduced from an intriguing marble head of a woman, of a type that represents the first flowering of marble sculpture in prehistoric Greece. The original head, made 2700-2500 B. C., is from the Cyclades, an island group in the Aegean Sea that's rich in marble, emery, and obsidian. Inhabitants of these islands began to produce marble figures and vessels as early as 5000 B. C. Little is known about these figural sculptures, which are predominantly women; the frequency of female figures makes it likely they were related to fertility. The Met's ancient sculpture displays traces of the eyes in extremely low relief, indicating they were formerly rendered with pigment.
The Met Store Auguste Rodin: The Thinker Sculpture The Met Store Auguste Rodin: The Thinker Sculpture 252.95 USD Bronze Statue, Fine Art Sculpture Our scaled reproduction in hand-patinated bonded bronze was scanned from a bronze of The Thinker in The Met collection, which was cast about 1910 from an original 19th-century model by Auguste Rodin (French, 1840-1917). Rodin's first government commission was for a monumental portal covered with sculptural reliefs for a Paris museum. He proposed a vast composition based loosely on Dante's Divine Comedy, but the work remained unfinished. The artist later began to extract individual figures from the reliefs and enlarge them to create freestanding sculptures. In its original position, The Thinker was at the center of the portal's lintel. The detached, brooding figure has been invested with multiple meanings-poet, judge, sculptor. Click
The Met Store Head of a Youth Sculpture The Met Store Head of a Youth Sculpture 192.95 USD Our bonded bronze reproduction is based on a 1st-century A. D. Roman cast-bronze head that is now in the Israel Museum. Produced in cooperation with the Israel Museum, Jerusalem.
The Met Store Edgar Degas: Dancer Sculpture The Met Store Edgar Degas: Dancer Sculpture 357.95 USD The Museum's sculpture is directly reproduced from a bronze cast made in 1920 after the death of Impressionist artist Edgar Degas (French, 1834-1917), who made the original mold.
The Met Store Veiled Dancer Sculpture The Met Store Veiled Dancer Sculpture 182.95 USD Our bonded-bronze reproduction is based on an original Greek statuette in the Museum's collection believed to be from the third-second century B. C. that shows the expressive qualities of a swirling dancer's drapery. The woman's face is covered by the sheerest of veils, discernible at its edge below her hairline and at the cutouts for the eyes. Her extended right foot shows a laced slipper. This dancer has been convincingly identified as a depiction of one of the professional entertainers, a combination of mime and dancer, for which the cosmopolitan city of Alexandria was famous in antiquity.
The Met Store Edgar Degas: Dancer with Raised Right Foot Sculpture The Met Store Edgar Degas: Dancer with Raised Right Foot Sculpture 457.95 USD Our reproduction is based on an original bronze sculpture cast in 1920 from an earlier model by Edgar Degas (French, 1834-1917) probably in wax; one of several versions he created that explore subtle variations in the dynamics of a dancer's movement.