Life-Size Skateboarding Figure Bronze Sculpture - 250cm
SKU: 66399558980

Life-Size Skateboarding Figure Bronze Sculpture - 250cm

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Description

Life-Size Skateboarding Figure Bronze Sculpture - 250cmDescription The Life Size Skateboarding Figure Bronze Sculpture stands at an imposing 250cm, capturing a single suspended moment of street athleticism: a male figure mid ride, weight pitched forward, arms flung wide, one knee bent into the crouch that keeps him balanced on a rolling board. The pose radiates kinetic energy, arrested in warm brown bronze. Cast Bronze, Hand Finished This piece is cast using the traditional lost wax method, which allows

Description

The Life-Size Skateboarding Figure Bronze Sculpture stands at an imposing 250cm, capturing a single suspended moment of street athleticism: a male figure mid-ride, weight pitched forward, arms flung wide, one knee bent into the crouch that keeps him balanced on a rolling board. The pose radiates kinetic energy, arrested in warm brown bronze.

Cast Bronze, Hand-Finished

This piece is cast using the traditional lost-wax method, which allows foundry artisans to preserve every nuance the original model carries: the break of fabric at a bent knee, the tension in an outstretched wrist, the slight asymmetry of an open mouth caught mid-exhilaration. The result is a hand-finished bronze figure whose surface shifts between the cooler tones of recessed clothing folds and the warmer highlights of raised features, all unified by a rich, even patina. The realistic bronze skateboard complete with individually resolved wheels sits beneath the figure as an integral casting, grounding the composition in the physical world.

At 250cm and 1,200kg, this is a piece designed to anchor a space entirely. It reads with equal authority in a commercial atrium, a hotel lobby, a civic plaza, or a wide private courtyard. Its contemporary urban subject sits naturally against glass-and-steel architecture, exposed concrete, and industrial palettes, though the warmth of the patina is equally at home against natural stone or timber surroundings. Supplied for both indoor and outdoor installation, the cast bronze construction weathers external conditions without surface compromise.

Handmade to Order, Fully Customisable

Patina options extend beyond the warm brown shown here: verde, dark espresso, and natural weathered finishes are all available on request. The figure can also be scaled up or down for specific architectural settings, or adapted as a portrait commission inspired by a named individual. If you are considering a bespoke version, contact us before ordering so we can confirm scope and timeline.

Browse our full range of Bronze Sculptures, explore the breadth of our Bronze Figures and Statues, or view other monumental works in our Life-Size Bronze Statues collection.

Specification

Height 250cm
Weight 1200kg
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SKU: 66399558980

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Mike Stone
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
A brilliant poetic narrative whose lines leap off the pages which turn themselves.
Format: Paperback
When you get to the end, you wonder how Kaminsky worked his wondrous magic, how it's possible to think and write poetry like that. The poem is a story about Vasenka, a mythical town somewhere in the Ukraine, occupied by the Soviet army during an unspecified period of time. It is an allegory of the cruelty of occupation, the futility of the resistance of a few, and the deafness of the silent majority, a deafness that courageously resists the occupation and a deafness that hardens the heart and ignores the evil surrounding them. It could have happened anywhere anytime. The occupiers could have been Nazis, Ottoman Turks, American, English, or Spanish. The poetry is piercingly sharp, visionary, breathless and the metaphors are the likes of which you've never heard before, lines like “the sound we do not hear lifts the gulls off the water,” “Our hearing doesn't weaken, but something silent in us strengthens,” or “In these avenues, deafness is our only barricade.” This is drop-dead beautiful poetry.
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Reviewed in the United States on March 22, 2019
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ARTHUR KLEIN
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Haunting Humanity lurks in war’s reactions.
Format: Kindle
The poem moves efficiently through the myriad experiences that result from deadly conflict with a nameless and menacing enemy. I kept thinking I was reading a rendering of Kafka with the haunting glimpses of the horror of permanent victim hood. Now I must study the Deaf Republic and hope for understanding.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2025
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Catherine
New York, US
★★★★★ 5
Beautifully written.
Format: Paperback
I read this book in one sitting and discovered that tears are included with purchase. Story is broken up into acts, like a play, and is told completely in verse. Sign language images accompany several of the poems.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 4, 2025
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A M Wells
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 5
What is silence? Something of the sky in us.
Format: Paperback
Maybe the best poetry collection I've ever read. I rarely enjoy an entire collection. I usually like individual poems or even individual lines within a poem. Deaf Republic is a masterpiece. If I ever meet Ilya Kaminsky in real life, I might cry.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 23, 2023
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Allegra C.
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
Worth the hype on NPR that led me here--I've found my new favorite book!
Format: Hardcover
As an Asian-American creative, I knew I'd love this when I first read a positive review for this online, and I was not disappointed once! The perspective is so unique--a Chinese girl in 1800s Georgia!--and the writing's mesmerizing. I wished this book could never end, and LOVED it for so many reasons: The quick version: -Have you ever read anything about Chinese-Americans living in the Reconstructionist South? Thought not. This book provides such a necessary historical lens into highly underrepresented people and untold stories--and does it with remarkable talent and grace. This alone is worth heavy consideration. -Jo is a protagonist you can't help admiring - she's witty, a nonconformist by circumstance and by choice, and unafraid of getting back a little (or a lot) at people who've done her wrong. -The narrative voice is unlike any I've ever seen before ("Mischief dangles from his smile") and there are great humorous moments. -Great pun one-liners here and there - even Yours Truly, who admits to hating puns, likes how they're done here. -A wonderful and dynamic supporting cast, including Jo's wry adoptive father, a socialite who reveals her cleverness with pepper, an enigmatic Southern Belle who becomes Jo's employer for the second time, and a stout-of-heart black boy that'll melt your cold dead heart. Also a very enthusiastic herding dog. -A climax that honestly almost moved me to tears from the poignancy, but also the deep symbolism of how Jo's actions come to stand for so, so much more in those several pages. -If you like to learn cool new words, you'll definitely learn a few by reading this. -On a personal note, I was ecstatic to find references to Chinese knotting and barley tea, which I've grown up with, but never encountered in print before. Stacey Lee isn't afraid to show how difficult it was to be Asian-American in post-Civil War Georgia: In the opening scene, Jo is fired from her job at a hat shop because of her ethnicity. Due to the Chinese Exclusion Act in effect at the time, Jo and her adoptive father are legally not US citizens and cannot even own land or rent; they're forced to live secretly as squatters in the basement of a family who prints a struggling local newspaper. We also see realistic depictions of other social issues, like the initial implementation of segregation laws (which confuses Jo and her father, as they're neither black nor white), the erecting of Confederate statues, calls for women's suffrage (as well as the emergence of modern bicycles) treated with derision by many women who think the idea foolish, and white suffragists rejecting black women who support their ideals. In all seriousness, get this book. If you have kids, get this for your kids. I rarely write book reviews, but I'm breaking the pattern because this novel is THAT good. Come for the incredibly unique historical perspective that's surely the first of its kind ever published and shines a spotlight on sorely underwritten stories. Stay for Jo's incredible strength, role model-ism, one-of-a-kind journey, and how her story reminds us all not just of the power of devastatingly clever puns, but the power that words give all of us in finding who we are and making the world a better place.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 25, 2019

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