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Edition 004

Till the last drop

Till the last drop

Maria Rubinke

Regular price 19.500,00 DKK
Regular price Sale price 19.500,00 DKK
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Material: Black and Green Patinated Bronze
Year: 2021
Dimensions: 30x 16 x 17 cm
Maria Rubinke's sculpture "Till the last drop," made of black and green patinated bronze, uses sharp detail and craftsmanship to portray the unexpected in a traditional piece. The merging of the traditional and unexpected encourages viewers to contemplate the combination of reality and the unrealistic.
Rubinke's unique sculpture, made with an admirable attention to detail and purpose, asks viewers to look closely and think deeply about her work and what it means in their reality. Her skilled craftsmanship helps her create a piece that tells a uniquely unexpected story.
Edition of 35 plus 5 AP
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Maria Rubinke

Maria Rubinke creates sculptures that are as beautiful as they are unsettling. Her work blends classical craftsmanship with dark, surreal imagery—delicate porcelain figures that look innocent at first glance, but quickly reveal something stranger underneath. It’s this contrast—between the sweet and the sinister—that makes her work so captivating.

She often works in bronze and glass, materials that suggest fragility and purity, but her subjects are anything but soft. Children with cracks in their skin, bodies split open to reveal something otherworldly—it’s like stepping into a dream that borders on a nightmare. But there’s a quiet elegance to it too. Nothing feels forced or grotesque for the sake of it. Each detail is carefully considered, beautifully made, and emotionally loaded.

Rubinke studied at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts and completed part of her training at the Academy of Fine Arts in Carrara, Italy. She’s exhibited at major galleries across Europe, including solo shows at Galerie Mikael Andersen in Copenhagen and Munch Gallery in New York, and her work has been shown at CHART Art Fair, Bornholm Art Museum, and Trapholt.

Her sculptures are part of both public and private collections, and she continues to push the boundaries of what porcelain sculpture can express. In a world that often separates beauty from discomfort, Rubinke brings the two together—creating works that are haunting, poetic, and impossible to forget.