AN AUSTRIAN COLD-PAINTED BRONZE GROUP OF A TEEPEE AND TWO NATIVE AMERICANS
AN AUSTRIAN COLD-PAINTED BRONZE GROUP OF A TEEPEE AND TWO NATIVE AMERICANS

LATE 19TH EARLY 20TH CENTURY, VIENNA, BERGMAN FOUNDRY

Details
AN AUSTRIAN COLD-PAINTED BRONZE GROUP OF A TEEPEE AND TWO NATIVE AMERICANS
LATE 19TH EARLY 20TH CENTURY, VIENNA, BERGMAN FOUNDRY
Modelled with two figures, one holding a pipe, the other a tomahawk, stamped to the underside 'B' within an urn and 'Geschützt'
15¼ in. (38.5 cm.) high

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Lot Essay

Franz Bergman established the foundry in Vienna, around 1885. The practice was continued by his son, Franz Xavier in 1894, who registered the well known stamp. Production was hampered by the depression on the 1930's and the business forced to close. It re-opened after World War II for a short spell until 1954 when it was taken over by Karl Fuhrmann & Co. Relatively little is recorded about the sculptors employed by the foundry, but C. Kauba is often credited with the creation of the American Indian bronzes.

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