Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
Colored sculpture of the head of a light-skinned woman with closed eyes and an elaborate jeweled headdress.

Head of Pavlova

1924

Malvina Hoffman (American, 1885–1966)

United States

In 1910 the sculptor Malvina Hoffman saw the famed Russian ballerina Anna Pavlova perform in London, a
profound experience that ultimately led to their close friendship. Hoffman spent years capturing the exquisite
grace of Pavlova’s movement in different sculptures and reliefs, yet in Head of Pavlova she created a restrained, almost melancholic portrait of the dancer wearing an elaborate Russian headdress, her eyes nearly closed. Hoffman explained that in her portraits of Pavlova, her friend appears as a “rather sad, thoughtful person, far removed from the vivacious and exciting fairy that Pavlova represents over the footlights.”

Wax on plaster with pigment, on wood mount

Women artists

Arts of the Americas