William Zorach

Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a girl with crossed arms, frontal view
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a girl with crossed arms, angled view
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a girl with crossed arms, side view
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a girl with crossed arms, side view
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a girl with crossed arms, rear view
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a girl with crossed arms, angled view
Alt text: Underside of sculpture with label reading

William Zorach
American, 1887 – 1966
Dahlov with crossed arms (Artist Daughter), c. 1926
Bronze, brown patina
11 H. inches
Signed: Zorach 3/12
Mounted on Black Marble Base

 

Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a frog
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a frog
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a frog
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a frog
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a frog
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a frog
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a frog
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a frog, signature detail
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a frog, underside

William Zorach (American, 1887-1966)
Frog, c. 1958
Bronze, 10 H. x 6 W. x 8 ½ D. inches
Inscribed with the artist’s signature and copyright and numbered 2/6, stamped, at the edge

Sold Archive

Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a girl and cat

William Zorach
American, 1887 – 1966
Girl With Cat,
1927
Bronze, brown and green patina
17 ¼ H. x 10 ½ W. x 8 D. inches
Signed and dated: WM ZORACH 1927
Edition of six castings

Alt text: Marble carving of a reclining nude woman
Alt text: Marble carving of a reclining nude woman
Alt text: Marble carving of a reclining nude woman
Alt text: Marble carving of a reclining nude woman
Alt text: Marble carving of a reclining nude woman, signature detail
Alt text: Marble carving of a reclining nude woman, signature detail

William Zorach (American, 1887-1966)
The Dream, 1949
Pink Tennessee marble
9 H. x 12 W. x 5 ¼ D. inches
Signed twice, carved into stone: right base Zorach / rear base Zorach
Signed underneath in red crayon or marker: William Zorach
Bears Zabriskie Gallery label underneath

Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a nude dancer kneeling with one leg on the ground, holding a shawl behind her, frontal view
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a nude dancer kneeling with one leg on the ground, holding a shawl behind her, rear view
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a nude dancer kneeling with one leg on the ground, holding a shawl behind her, angled view
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a nude dancer kneeling with one leg on the ground, holding a shawl behind her, angled view
Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a nude dancer kneeling with one leg on the ground, holding a shawl behind her, angled view
Alt text: Detail of artist signature

William Zorach
American, 1887 – 1966
Spirit of the Dance, 1932
Bronze, brown patina with parcel-gilt.
25 1/2 H x 16 3/8W. x 10 ½ D. inches.
Signed on base: Zorach
Edition of 6 casts.  Original marble base: 1 1/8 H. inches

Alt text: Bronze sculpture of a girl and her dog

William Zorach
American, 1887 – 1966
Affection, 1933
Bronze, light brown patina
31 ¼ H. x 28 ½ W. x 12 D. inches
Signed and inscribed on base: ZORACH 1933 / 5/6 (edition)
Cast at Roman Bronze Works Foundry, New York, circa 1930’s
Set on period wood base

Artist Description

Zorach Gorfinkel was born in 1889 into a Lithuanian Jewish family in Jurbarkas (Russian: Eurburg) in Lithuania (then a part of the Russian Empire) as the eighth of ten children, Zorach (then his given name) emigrated with his family to the United States in 1894. They settled in Cleveland, Ohio under the name “Finkelstein”. In school, his first name was changed to “William” by a teacher. Zorach stayed in Ohio for almost 15 years pursuing his artistic endeavors. He worked as a lithographer as a teenager and went on to study painting with Henry G. Keller at the Cleveland School of Art from 1905 to 1907. In 1908, Zorach moved to New York in enroll in the National Academy of Design. In 1910, Zorach moved to Paris with Cleveland artist and lithographer, Elmer Brubeck, to continue his artistic training at the La Palette art school.

Graham Shay 1857 is committed to making its website accessible to all people, including individuals with disabilities. We are in the process of making sure our website, www.grahamshay.com, complies with best practices and standards as defined by Section 508 of the U.S. Rehabilitation Act and Level AA of the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0. These guidelines explain how to make web content more accessible for people with disabilities. Conformance with these guidelines will help make the web more user-friendly for all people. If you would like additional assistance or have accessibility concerns, please contact us at 212 535 5767 or info@grahamshay.com
© 2024 Shay Art, LLC | Accessibility