Dame Elisabeth Frink, R.A. (1930-1993)
Dame Elisabeth Frink, R.A. (1930-1993)

Soldier's head III

细节
Dame Elisabeth Frink, R.A. (1930-1993)
Soldier's head III
signed and numbered 'Frink 2/6' (on the back of the neck)
bronze with a brown patina
14 in. (35.6 cm.) high
Conceived in 1965
出版
E. Mullins (intro.), The Art of Elisabeth Frink, London, 1972, pl.71 (another cast illustrated).
B. Robertson, Elisabeth Frink Sculpture, Salisbury, 1984, no.119, p.163 (another cast illustrated).

拍品专文

Sarah Kent (see B. Robertson, op. cit., p.59) considers that the 'Soldiers Heads' of 1965 'epitomize the brutalizing stupidity of war. With them the traditional warrior stereotype has mutated into a more complex and original personality. Several thick-set and brutish heads present the faces of our contemporaries. Their heavy jaws, cruel mouths, broken noses and cauliflower ears make it plain that these men are not heroes and that, unlike their idealized classical counterparts, ['The Warriors'] nobility, honour and courage are foreign to their natures. They are merely tools, their helmets merging with their skulls to imply total identification with their roles. Low foreheads, flattened brow ridges, piggy eyes or empty sockets convey the numbness of shell-shock or brain damage. Their punch-drunk, almost catatonic stares suggest they have been used as cannon-fodder and exposed to the full force of enemy aggression. Their distorted features have no antecedents nor any blood relatives in contemporary sculpture. Frink's uniquely vicious breed offers a fresh perspective on the heroes that populate our culture demonstrating beyond doubt that the heroic fighter may just as well be seen as a thug or mercenary, depending on your viewpoint, and the decisive leader as an authoritarian bully. The qualities admired by one group may be those most despised by another - the 'baddies' don't always work for the other side'.