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Gerdago “Fancy Dancer”
Gerdago “Fancy Dancer”
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Product Details

A fabulous early 20th Century gilt bronze and ivory figure of a kneeling beauty her outfit highlighted with enamel decoration exhibiting excellent colour and hand carved detail, raised on an onyx base and signed


ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Height:                                      18 cm                                      


Condition:                              Excellent Original Condition


Circa:                                        1925


Materials:                               Cold Painted Bronze & Ivory


Book Ref                                  Art Deco and Other Figures by Bryan Catley


SKU:                                          7832


ABOUT

Gerdago Biography

Gerda Ira Gerdago (Austrain, 1906 ~ 2004) was an Austrian theatrical costume designer and sculptor. Born in Vienna in 1906. We know that until 1927 she lived in Berlin, and in 1928-29 received her art education in Paris, where she worked as an assistant architect to Oscar Strand. From 1931 to 1934 she studied as a theatrical designer. She made costumes for the theatre "Femina", it was there that she met with Willy Forst. She worked as a dresser on his first film.  She was a costume designer for numerous productions in Vienna's major theatres throughout the 1950s and 1960s and designed the costumes and posters for the Vienna Ice Revue shows from 1945 onwards.

Art Deco Period

The Period: although Art Deco derives its name from the great 1925 Paris Exhibition, ‘’, the term is now generally applied to the typical artistic productions of the 1920’s and 1930’s. It might best be characterised as an attempt to unite arts with industry, embracing the machine age and repudiating the old antithesis of ‘Fine’ and ‘Industrial’ art. The sources of the Art Deco movement include Egyptian and Mayan Art, Cubisim, Fauvism and Expressionism, heavily influencing the chief force underlying all Art Deco with the emphasis upon geometric patterns.

 

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