"Volti Antoniucci (1915-1989) - Woman Ball - Bronze With Lost Wax Foundry Susse 1/6"
VOLTI Antoniucci (1915-1989) - Ball woman - Figure 204 - lost wax bronze with bluish black patina - period cast (1967), numbered 1/6, Susse fondeur - dimensions: 14.5H x 22 L x 15 P This piece is accompanied by its certificate of authenticity with photographs, of the sons and beneficiaries of the sculptor, the VOLTI joint possession. Volti is an extraordinary sculptor who reconciles us with the beautiful. His art is part of a tradition4: Volti does not deny the heritage of the past, the legacy of the Rodins, Maillol, Henry Moore, but he integrates it into a new form, which comforts and gives us immediate pleasure: the Volti's sculpture is smooth, round, human. Nothing is sharp in her, even in the most geometric sculptures reminiscent of the art of Henry Moore, nothing is aggressive, and everything is reminiscent of life. Volti is an architect of women, compared to Maillol, his sculpture can be monumental or small, but is always rigorous, balanced, stable. The most exceptional element which characterizes the talent of Volti's sculpture are the "voids": those spaces that classical and modern sculptors fill because only Volti was able to respect, the empty spaces in a body squatting (Intimacy) or bent on itself (Night) the ability to work the earth by giving it life and the movement of the bodies of its models. This is what makes him a very sought after artist and known around the world. His works are kept in the public collections [ref. necessary] and private collections such as that of Alain Delon, which has two Musesde Volti [ref. necessary].