Study for Princess X (recto); Female Head in Profile (verso)
1913–1915
https://clevelandart.org/art/1982.373
Brancusi produced very few drawings and these were not preparatory for sculpture. His complaint, "There are too many lines," implies that for him the purest distillation of form can be achieved only in three dimensions. Drawing for pleasure, Brancusi's freely executed, gracefu...
Drawing
| id |
id
150972
|
|---|---|
| contentType |
contentType
drawing
|
| citation |
citation
|
| rights |
rights
Copyrighted
|
| rightsUri |
rightsUri
Copyrighted
|
| language |
language
en
|
| wikidata |
wikidata
[
"Q79934040"
]
|
| source |
source
import
|
| accession |
accession
1982.373
|
Source image fields (1)
| imageCount | 0 |
|---|
Terms
Culture
France, 20th century
Technique
pencil and mustard crayon
Medium
pencil and mustard crayon
Genre
Drawing
Department
Drawings
Relations
belongs_to