a symbolist bronze self portrait inkwell

CAST AFTER THE MODEL BY SARAH BERNHARDT, 1880

Details
a symbolist bronze self portrait inkwell
Cast after the model by Sarah Bernhardt, 1880
Modelled with large bat wings feathered on the exterior, spiny reptilian tail and the clawed limbs of a mythical beast, clutching an open bowl with massive ram's horns and set with a devil's head, the inkwell concealed beneath a removable cover in the form of a pile of books, a space for a quill pen cast into her hair, on shaped bronze base
12in. (30.5cm.) high
Signed and dated in the maquette Sarah Bernhardt 1880, foundry mark for Thiebaut Frères Paris

Lot Essay

The strong symbolist influence of this piece is a departure from Bernhardt's more conventional or Romantic subjects. It reflects not only her certain knowledge of the work of such artists as Moreau and Doré, but also more directly her own role at the time. In 1879, Bernhardt was rehearsing for the role of Blanche de Chelles in Octave Feuillet's play Le Sphinx, in which the mysterious and even demonic heroine wore a poison ring in the form of a sphinx, and with whom Bernhardt may well have identified. The inkwell appears to have been conceived on one level as a celebration of her role in Feuillet's play, and on a deeper level as an evocation of what Bernhardt perceived herself to be. The critic Jules Lemaître described her as "...a distant and chimerical creature, both hieratic and serpentine, with a lure both mystical and sensual". In the inkwell Bernhardt has portrayed herself in a potent and dangerous combination which is part woman, part bat, part gryphon and part sphinx; her professional persona is evoked by the maskes of Comedy and Tragedy on either side, and a sense of the diabolical is given by the skull at the front.
A cast of the inkwell was exhibited at the Union League Club of New York in 1880 in an exhibition entitled "Sarah Bernhardt Souvenir, including the Authorised Catalogue of Her Paintings and Sculptures".
Another example of this bronze is in the permanent collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and a further cast is recorded as having been in the collection of the late Queen Mary.

More from Decorative Arts

View All
View All