Kneeling youth by George Minne - 1898 Kröller-Müller Museum Kneeling youth by George Minne - 1898 Kröller-Müller Museum

Kneeling youth

bronze •
  • George Minne - 30 August 1866 - 18 February 1941 George Minne 1898

For many years, George Minne worked on the theme of the kneeling, introverted youth. In this, he sought maximum expression with minimal means. Kneeling youth is the culmination of his quest for an ascetic, stylized line and simple design.

The Flemish sculptor does not strive for anatomical correctness. The figure of the fragile youth is elongated, as it were, and his hands and head appear too large for his fragile body. The bowed head and arms folded in front of the chest give the sculpture a mystical and somewhat religious character.

Kneeling youth is Minne’s most famous sculpture. He created variations in plaster, bronze, and marble. Furthermore, he was commissioned by a German collector for a figure group with five identical kneeling youths on the edge of a circular basin. This Fountain with Kneeling Youths is in the Museum Folkwang in Essen.

We present today's painting thanks to one of our favorite museums:  Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo. Enjoy! :)

P.S. You can have a painterly look into sculptors’ studios here!