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Edgar Brandt Pair of "Cobra" Bookends

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$12,500

This arresting pair of "Cobra" Bookends assume a particularly dramatic pose, with their throats dilated and their bodies coiled, their scaled skin beautifully rendered in wrought iron. Brandt was fascinated, as was the world, by the discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb by Howard Carter on November 4, 1922. The Mask of Tutankhamun was decorated with the figure of the sacred cobra to ward off enemies. Carter’s stupendous archaeological achievement was revealed in photographs of the tomb’s treasures, and their publication coincided with the ironsmith’s preparations from the Paris exposition. Egyptian motifs thereafter became a mainstay in Brandt’s oeuvre, twisting and weaving with the exotic symbols of the Orient.

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  • Curator's Notes

Item #: S-21457
Artist: Edgar Brandt
Country: France
Circa: 1925
Dimensions: 8" height, 4.5" width, 5.75" depth
Materials: Cast Iron
Signed: each impressed E.BRANDT
Literature: J. Kahr, Edgar Brandt: Master of Art Deco Ironwork, New York, 1999, p. 158 (for a related andiron) J. Kahr, Edgar Brandt: Art Deco Ironwork, New York, 2010, p. 135 (for a related andiron)

Edgar Brandt, who found fame and fortune as an artillery designer and manufacturer in France during the first and second world wars, was most dedicated to his work as an artist in metalwork. He made invaluable contributions to both country and the arts, receiving such prestigious awards as Knight of the Legion of Honor, and the Medal of Honor for Applied Art by the Societe des Artistes Francais.
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