Bird in Space, by Constantin Brancusi
This highly polished bronze, which is often regarded as the pinnacle of Brancusi’s work, stands five feet tall, supported on a solid stone base that contrasts with the lightness of the metal.
Is it a bird lifting into the air? Or a golden feather falling to earth? Its beauty derives from the fact that it is neither symmetrical nor geometrical, and therefore appears to be a product of nature rather than human artifice.
It has a haunting presence that encapsulates Brancusi’s mystic symbolic approach to art, governed by his fascination with universal symbols of life and fertility, and a desire to “arrive at simplicity in spite of ourselves”.
Brancusi was renowned for reworking his themes in a constant search for purity. That was why he created 28 versions of “Bird in Space”.