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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Bernard Meadows, Frightened Bird, 1958

Bernard Meadows 1915-2005

Frightened Bird, 1958
Bronze
10.5 x 10 x 4.5 in
26.7 x 23.5 x 11.4 cm
Artist’s proof, aside from the edition of 6
Inscribed with the artist’s monogram and numbered 0/6
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In the 1950s Meadows sculpted a series of birds, Running, Frightened, Fallen and Shot; he used their fragile frames to channel the feelings of threat, fear and suffering which afflicted...
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In the 1950s Meadows sculpted a series of birds, Running, Frightened, Fallen and Shot; he used their fragile frames to channel the feelings of threat, fear and suffering which afflicted his generation in the aftermath of the war. He said, “Birds can express a whole range of tragic emotion, they have a vulnerability which makes it easy to use them as vehicles for people”. In another text for his 1959 Gimpel Fils Gallery one-man show, he expanded, “To use non-human figures is for me at the present time less inhibiting; one is less conscious of what has gone before and is more free to take liberties with the form and to make direct statements than with the human figure: nevertheless they are essentially human...”
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Literature

Alan Bowness, Bernard Meadow Sculpture and Drawings, (London: The Henry Moore Foundation / Lund Humphries, 1995) pp. 14- 15, 52 & 140
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E: office@willoughbygerrish.com

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