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Alfredo Pina

Young Boy1911

$8,500
Signed: A Pina Paris 1911 lower right Marked: Valsuani Cire Perdue foundry stampBronze with riche green and black patinaWith base: 23" x 13 1/2" x 7" Bronze: 17 1/2" x 13 1/2" x 7 Base: 5 1/2" x 5 1/2" x 3 1/2"
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Pina Young Boy (placeholder)
Pina Young Boy
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Description

This bronze bust of a young boy reflects the persistent naturalism that continued into the early 20th century, even as sculptors were loosening their surfaces and adopting more expressive modeling. The child’s features are rendered with clarity and restraint, his hair, clothing, and facial structure described with a sensitive hand that reveals Pina’s grounding in academic technique. While the form is solid and still, the surface carries a subtly worked texture that shows the lingering influence of Auguste Rodin’s approach to bronze, an emphasis on the living, shifting quality of modeling rather than polished finish. The work fits within Pina’s early interest in faithful portraiture, yet it also hints at the emerging modern tendency to let the sculptor’s touch remain visible, allowing emotion and immediacy to come through the clay-like treatment of the bronze.

Alfredo Pina was an Italian sculptor born in Milan in 1883 and trained at the prestigious Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera, where he developed a strong classical foundation in modeling and bronze casting. Early success in Italian exhibitions and national competitions earned him recognition at a young age, and by the 1910s he relocated to Paris, then the epicenter of modern sculpture. In Paris he absorbed the influence of Auguste Rodin and Antoine Bourdelle, merging expressive modernist modeling with the dignity and psychological depth of the late-19th-century academic tradition.

Pina established a studio in Sceaux, just outside Paris, and worked almost exclusively in bronze using the lost-wax process. His sculpture sits at the crossroads of realism and expressive modern form: weighty, muscular modeling, sharply defined facial planes, and a brooding emotional presence. These qualities became his hallmark, especially in his portrait busts, a format in which he excelled and through which he gained his greatest acclaim.

Among Pina’s most admired works are his sculptural portraits of great composers, particularly Ludwig van Beethoven, Niccolò Paganini, and Richard Wagner. Rather than producing formal, idealized likenesses, Pina approached these figures as psychological studies. His aim was not simply to record their features, but to give material form to genius, temperament, and inner struggle.

Pina exhibited widely in Paris Salons and Italian venues, including early 20th-century Venice Biennales, solidifying his international reputation. His bronzes were produced by respected French foundries, and examples continue to appear in museum collections and specialist auctions, admired for their craftsmanship and emotional impact.

Although his style remained grounded in realism rather than fully embracing abstraction, Pina bridged the classical and modern eras, creating works that feel timeless rather than tied to a single movement. His composer portraits in particular stand as powerful objects, portraits that do not merely resemble their subjects but seem to pulse with their inner life.