Undine Rising from the Waters, ca. 1880-1892, by Chauncey Bradley Ives (1810-1894), in the Yale University Art Gallery. See also Image:Undine_Rising_from_the_Waters,_front.JPG. Date: 19 December 2006 (according to Exif data) Source: No machine-readable source provided. Own work assumed (based on copyright claims). Author. Undine Rising from the Water Medium: marble, on a rouge marble pedestal Size: 126.37 cm. (49.8 in.) Description: * Sale: * Estimate: * Price: * Bid Department: * Price Database * Subscribe now to view details for this work, and gain access to over 10 million auction results. PURCHASE ONE-DAY PASS.

Undine Rising from the waters

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Undine Rising from the Waters was a passion project for Chauncey Bradley Ives, driven by his fascination with the myth of Undine and his desire to capture her essence in marble. The sculpture offered Ives an opportunity to explore themes of beauty, transformation, and the relationship between humanity and nature... White marble seems to dissolve into rippling wet fabric as the water nymph Undine changes from liquid to human form. Abandoned by her husband, the heartbroken nymph is seeking revenge: an embrace that will drown him with tears. Magical episodes like Undine's metamorphosis—made famous by an 1811 German fairy tale—gave Chauncey Ives and other American sculptors valuable opportunities to.