Ossip Zadkine
1890 - 1967
Ciel printanier
62.5 x 41 cm (24 ⁵/₈ x 16 ¹/₈ inches)
Signed lower left, O. Zadkine 58.

Private collection, London
The Museum Zadkine in Paris confirmed the authenticity of this work.
This original artwork by Ossip Zadkine is available for immediate purchase.
Ossip Zadkine
biography
Zadkine settled in Paris about 1910. He spent a few months at the École des Beaux-Arts, before working independently. In 1911-12 he met Apollinaire, Brancusi, Archipenko, Lipchitz and Picasso. He practised direct carving in wood and stone, and made simplified figures partly influenced by Romanesque art. Then he became part of the new Cubist movement (1914-1925). He later developed his own style, one that was strongly influenced by African art.
Zadkine served as a stretcher-bearer in the French Army (1915-18) during World War I, where he was wounded in action. His first one-man exhibition was at the Galerie Le Centaure, Brussels, in 1919. From circa 1925 he modelled sculpture for casting in bronze and developed compositions of greater complexity, sometimes with several figures and an interplay of convex and concave planes. He spent the World War II years from 1941-5 in America, as a refugee in New York. Then he returned to Paris 1945, where he taught at the Grande Chaumière.
Zadkine’s best-known work is probably the sculpture The Destroyed City (1951-1953), representing a man without a heart. It is a memorial to the destruction of the center of the Dutch city, Rotterdam, in 1940 by the German Luftwaffe.
In 1920, Zadkine married Valentine Prax (1899-1991), an Algerian-born painter of Sicilian and French Catalan descent. They had no children. The artist's only child, Nicolas Hasle (born 1960), was the result of his affair with a Danish woman, Annelise Hasle.
Zadkine was awarded the main sculpture prize at the 1950 Venice Biennale. His later works included a monumental figure commemorating the bombing of Rotterdam and a monument to van Gogh at Auvers-sur-Oise.
The artist died in Paris, 25 November 1967, at the age of 77, after undergoing abdominal surgery, and was interred in the Cimetière du Montparnasse. His former home and studio is now the Musée Zadkine.
Ossip Zadkine
biography

you may also like
1887 - 1985
Couple Allongé au Grand Bouquet
76.1 x 56.9 cm (30 x 22 ³/₈ inches)
1901 - 1980
Cavallo e Cavaliere
41.8 x 29.6 cm (16 ¹/₂ x 11 ⁵/₈ inches)
1898 - 1968
Still Life with Violin
81 x 65 cm (31 ⁷/₈ x 25 ⁵/₈ inches)
1883 - 1955
Rue à Sannois
53 x 78 cm (20 ⁷/₈ x 30 ³/₄ inches)