Skip to main content

Kneeling Youth

Maker (Belgian, 1866-1941)
Datecirca 1900
MediumCast plaster
DimensionsHeight: 29-1/2 in. (75 cm)
Base (width x depth): 6 x 13-1/2 in. (15.2 x 34.3 cm)
Credit LinePurchase, The Paul and Miriam Kirkley Fund for Acquisitions
CopyrightCopyright managed by Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Object number2008.16
Status
Not on view
Description
Kneeling Youth is George Minne's best-known sculpture.  The lean figure's vulnerable pose with bowed head and crossed arms gives the sculpture a sense of quiet introspection. It was originally made as a set of five identical marble figures arranged in an inward looking circle around the edge of a fountain. Minne made the first version around 1898, when his work was just beginning to be recognized in Europe. This monument was first exhibited in Vienna at the Eighth Exhibition of the Secession in 1900, and after its appearance there, the Kneeling Youth became an icon of Viennese modern art.  The original fountain resides at the Folkwang Museum in Essen, Germany.
Smart Publications:
The Tragic Muse
At The Smart
Girl on a Chair
George Segal
1970
Death Mask of Modigliani
Jacques Lipchitz
1920 (bronze edition)
Head of Pierre de Wiessant (Type A)
Auguste Rodin
circa 1885 - 1886 (model, cast circa 1910 - 1911)
Joan of Arc at Domrémy
Henri-Michel-Antoine Chapu
after 1870 - 1872
Absalom, Absalom
Cosmo Campoli
1958
Joseph Accused by Potiphar's Wife
Noël Hallé
circa 1740 - 1744
No. 2
Mark Rothko
1962
Ophelia
Anna Lea Merritt
1880
The Magdalene Attended by Two Angels
Giuseppe Marchesi (called Il Sansone)
circa 1740 - 1750