Dancer and Gazelles

Description

This graceful trio by Paul Manship exemplifies his ability to synthesize different artistic influences in his work. The dancer, raised elegantly on the balls of her feet, gestures with her arms toward the two gazelles. Her pose is reminiscent of figures in medieval Indian paintings while the stylized draped fabric of her skirt recalls archaic Greek sculpture. Manship demonstrated his keen eye for detail in the intricate linear ornament that adorns the skirt and the base of the sculpture. Despite the artist’s assimilation of past art forms, works like Dancer and Gazelles were seen as fresh and original; as one critic noted in 1916 “the extreme modernists and the academicians united in paying tribute to his genius.”

Dancer and Gazelles

Paul Manship

1916

Accession Number

72198

Medium

Bronze

Dimensions

H.: 78.7 cm (31 in.); Base: 84.5 × 25.4 cm (33 1/4 × 10 in.)

Classification

bronze

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Friends of American Art Collection