
The Negress
1934
Executed in 1934, Henri Laurens's bronze sculpture "The Negress" stands as a commanding example of the artist's mature synthesis of Cubist fragmentation and sensuous organic form. At 74 centimeters in height, the figure possesses a monumental presence that belies its intimate scale, with Laurens orchestrating sweeping curves and compressed volumes into a composition of remarkable sculptural tension. The surface of the bronze carries that distinctive patina characteristic of the period, lending the work a warm, earthen depth that reinforces the figure's grounded, elemental quality. Laurens, who came of age alongside Braque and Picasso in the fertile early decades of the twentieth century, had by the 1930s moved decisively away from the angular severity of his Cubist constructions toward a more fluid vocabulary rooted in the classical tradition. "The Negress" reflects this evolution with particular clarity, the figure's rounded masses and rhythmic contours recalling ancient fertility sculptures while simultaneously speaking a thoroughly modern formal language. The work belongs to a celebrated series of female nudes that Laurens developed across the 1930s, works now held in major international collections that confirm his standing among the essential sculptors of the European avant-garde. For the serious collector, a signed Laurens bronze of this period and scale represents a rare point of entry into one of the twentieth century's most coherent sculptural bodies of work. The work is currently held at Statens Museum for Kunst in Copenhagen, a provenance that speaks to both its institutional significance and its sustained scholarly regard. Pieces of this quality and historical weight seldom appear outside permanent museum holdings, making this an acquisition of genuine consequence.
- Medium
- Bronze
- Overall
- Signed
- Yes
- Location
- Statens Museum for Kunst, Copenhagen Municipality, Denmark
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