MODERN   SCULPTURE  COLLECTION

                             FRED  KORMIS 
                                [1897-1986]


                            FRED  KORMIS  -  Prisoners of War x 4, 1969-72:
                                                    In Stupor after Capture;
                                                    Longing for Freedom;
                                                    Fight against Gloom;
                                                    Hope Lost.
                      resin bronze, edition of 2 [2/2], all signed, 68 cm high
                            Provenance: The artist; Private collection, UK;
                                      Christies auction, 16 July 2008, lot 71
                          Cast 1/2 is in the Imperial War Museum collection. 
         These are maquettes for a large public sculpture in Brent, London
 

                 

                    FRED  KORMIS

                           Freedom
                               1922
                             bronze
                 [with marble base]
                             unique
                             signed
                        28 cm high
            [including base 42 cm]
    Provenance: Private collection
 [Sculpted just after escaping from           the POW camp in Siberia]

                 

                    FRED  KORMIS

                           Homage
                             c. 1966
                             bronze
                             signed
                         29 x 23 cm

               
                   FRED  KORMIS

                              Nude
                            bronze
                            unique
                            signed
                       16 cm high

Fred [Fritz] Kormis was born in Frankfurt in 1897 and attended Frankfurt Art School.
When WW1 began he joined the Austrian army in 1914 and was wounded and captured by the Russians in 1915 and was sent to a Prisoner of War [POW] camp in Siberia. 
He finally escaped in 1921 and after returning to Germany sculpted 'Freedom' [above] in 1922.
He moved to the UK in 1934 to escape the Nazis and lived in London for the rest of his life.
His POW experiences influenced much of his later work, culminating in the 1969-72 POW public sculptures above. 

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