Heron, ca. 1920-30
Marie ZimmermanBronze
14.5 × 12.25 × 7.5 inches
Provenance
Collection of the artist, until her death in 1972
Ms. Ida Egli, Marie Zimmermann’s caretaker and companion
The contemplative bird stands elegantly amidst lotus blossoms and lily pads—imagery that evokes both Egyptian Revival and Japanism. Symbol of regeneration, the heron was associated in Egyptian mythology with the rising sun and life renewal, standing away from the rising waters at the time of the Nile annual ground fertilizing inundation. This unique Heron sculpture held a special place in Marie Zimmerman’s work, as she retained it in her collection for her entire life alongside the “Egyptian” box, which now resides in the collection of The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
Literature
- Deborah Dependahl Water, Joseph Cunningham and Bruce Barnes, The Jewelry and Metalwork of Marie Zimmerman, New York, 2011, p. 321 (for the present lot illustrated)