Rooster (Gallic Cock)

Description

A pioneer of Cubist sculpture, Duchamp-Villon carved the original plaster for this bronze relief while serving in the army during World War I. It was intended for the entrance to a temporary theater erected near the front lines, where French soldiers would have recognized the rooster and rising sun as symbols of victory. Duchamp-Villon died during the war, and in 1919, five bronze casts were made from his plaster as a memorial to the artist.

Provenance

John Quinn; Lucia McCurdy McBride (1927 ); John Quinn; Lucia McCurdy McBride, 1927

Rooster (Gallic Cock)

Raymond Duchamp-Villon

1916 (plaster), cast 1919

Accession Number

1972.227

Medium

painted bronze

Dimensions

Overall: 43.5 x 36 x 5.5 cm (17 1/8 x 14 3/16 x 2 3/16 in.)

Classification

Sculpture

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Bequest of Lucia McCurdy McBride