LOTE 5:
'Aharon HaCohen'. A Bronze Sculpture By Georges Weil and the Morris Singer Foundry. England, 1980s
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Precio inicial:
$
1 000
Precio estimado :
$2 500 - $3 500
Comisión de la casa de subasta: 25%
Más detalles
IVA: 18%
IVA sólo en comisión
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'Aharon HaCohen'. A Bronze Sculpture By Georges Weil and the Morris Singer Foundry. England, 1980s
Georges Weil was a talented, autodidact, most colorful artist. Collectors of Weil's works included Frank Sinatra, Sammy David Jr., Peter Sellers, Queen Elizabeth of England, and the Hollywood Queen - Elizabeth Taylor.
One art critic of the Illustrated London News, wishing to express his appreciation of Weil's work, went so far as to declare, “Fabergé objects, exquisite as they are, and superb as their workmanship is, are really no more than expensive toys – Weil’s pieces are works of art".
The sculpture of Aharon HaCohen:
Unique, impressive artistic interpretation of the figure of Aharon made of Bronze.
A unique work of art made by the artist in England with the important Morris Singer Foundry.
On the marble pinth, Weil placed the figure of Aharon HaCohen with his hands raised for Birkat Cohanim. Cast bronze.
Biography:
Weil was born in 1938 in Vienna and his family was one of the last to escape via Antwerp to London in 1939
Although not much is known of his early life, it is known that Weil briefly attended London’s St. Martins School of Art in 1956. He studied sculpturing and jewellery design, describing himself first as a sculptor and only then as a jewellery designer.
Sculptural flair can be seen in his jewellery designs which are modernist, abstract and asymmetrical. In 1960s and 70s jewellery, the single most important element was the overall stylistic impact of the piece and not the intrinsic value of the diverse elements used. Weil used precious stones, both cut and uncut. Silver and gold could be used together with diamonds and less valuable, inorganic or organic material such as pearls or wood.
In 1969, Weil made works for the Jean Renet Gallery, which opened on Bond St. and an exhibition of his works was held in 1971. Weil's works in this early period included bronze portrait-sculptures of David Ben-Gurion and Winston Churchill, Charles de Gaulle and the singer/actor Sammy Davis Jr.
Weil also began to create sculpture made of gold, silver and precious gems, jewelry as objects d’art, which earned him glowing press reviews that compared his work to that of Cellini and Fabergé. Many of Weil’s sculptures in precious metal depict distinctly Jewish themes.
Among his major projects was the creation in 1994 of a five-meter bronze sculpture of a man blowing a Shofar, installed at the entrance to Herzliya Pituach, near the beach where Holocaust survivors landed toward the end of the British Mandate, 1945-1948. A similar sculpture, made the following year, was installed at Gilelleje, Denmark, where Danish Jews were taken in boats to Sweden during the Nazi occupation of the country.
Weil is also considered the only Jewish Netsuke artist in history. He is the only foreigner invited to join the Art Carver Society of Japan.
His wide variety of works indicate that several themes interested Weil at different times. Jewry with its varied content is an especially central motif, as well as Jewish symbols, the circle of the year and the Holocaust.
Provenance: The Bloch Family Collection, Melbourne-Australia.
Peso: | 7.4 kg |
Medidas: | 15 x 54 cm |
Profundidad: | 10 cm |

