Bronze Sculpture for Sale
The violin occupies a central place in contemporary sculpture as a motif at the crossroads of the musical world, cultural memory, and formal experimentation on the object and its sculptural possibilities.
Present in art history since Baroque still lifes, where it appeared among vanities and allegories of the arts, it underwent a radical transformation in the 20th century when the Cubists, Picasso and Braque in particular, fragmented and recomposed it through simultaneous perspectives until it became an almost abstract motif, laying the foundations for a long tradition of sculptural reinterpretation of the instrument.
However, it is with Arman, a major figure of Nouveau Réalisme, that the violin finds its most emblematic and radical sculptural translation: sliced into regular segments in his Coupes, accumulated into dense masses, burned or exploded, the instrument ceases to be representation and becomes the object itself, subjected to plastic operations that directly question the relationship between function and form, between the beauty of the utilitarian object and its transformation into artistic material.
This foundational legacy continues to inform contemporary sculptural practices, where the violin is deconstructed, fragmented, cast, or reinterpreted through materials as varied as bronze, resin, glass, or hybrid assemblages. Its elegant silhouette with distinctive organic curves also makes it a visually rich object, conducive to formal explorations ranging from precise expressive figuration to highly conceptual approaches, where the instrument almost disappears in favor of reflections on memory, disappearance, and transformation.
On Artsper, this selection brings together works in which the violin becomes a visual language in its own right, demonstrating the enduring capacity of a musical object to inspire sculptural explorations of inexhaustible richness and diversity.
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