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<object xmlns:xs="//www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema"><field label="PrimaryMedia" name="primaryMedia"><value>/internal/media/dispatcher/34670/full</value></field><field label="Registration Number" name="invno"><value>FAS/S/317</value></field><field label="Title" name="title"><value>Speed</value></field><field label="Classification(s)" name="classifications"><value>Art / Sculptures</value></field><field label="Period" name="period"><value>20th century</value></field><field label="Date" name="displayDate"><value>1937</value></field><field label="Begin Date" name="beginDate"><value>1937</value></field><field label="End Date" name="endDate"><value>1937</value></field><field label="Primary Maker" name="primaryMaker"><value>Antonio Sciortino</value></field><field label="Artist / Maker / Culture" name="people"><value>Antonio Sciortino</value></field><field label="Width" name="width"><value>27.5000000000</value></field><field label="Description" name="description"><value>‘Speed’ is one of Antonio Sciortino’s equine sculptures but it aims to express an abstract concept, that of speed. The horses seem to blend into one another as they race forward and are reduced to little more than horizontal lines. The stylisation of the sculpture betrays an Art Deco influence, but the concept and the use of lines to depict movement look towards Futurism. The lines are the gushes of displaced air caused by the forward projectile movement of the horses. Only the horses’ heads with flaring nostrils and their front legs remind us that this is a figurative work. Sciortino felt strongly about this piece, describing it as a strong power passing through which no obstacle can stop, leaving behind a force leading in the opposite direction.</value></field><field label="Height" name="height"><value>55.0000000000</value></field><field label="Depth" name="depth"><value>155.0000000000</value></field><field label="Provenance" name="provenance"><value>Acquired at a local auction in 2014.</value></field><field label="Dimensions" name="dimensions"><value>55 (H) x 27.5 (W) x 155 (L) cm</value></field><field label="Museum" name="department"><value>MUŻA</value></field><field label="Location" name="locations"><value>MUŻA, Ground Floor, Modern and Contemporary: 1930 onwards, Antonio Sciortino</value></field><field label="Alternate ID Numbers" name="altNums"><value>21557-8</value><value>81471</value></field><field label="Public Access" name="onview"><value>1</value></field><field label="Object Type" name="textEntriesObjecttype"><value>Sculpture</value></field><field label="Node" name="node"><value>Heritage Malta</value></field><field label="Source ID" name="sourceId"><value>3705</value></field><field label="Material" name="textEntriesMaterial"><value>Bronze</value></field><field label="Technique" name="textEntriesTechnique"><value>Bronze casting from plaster model</value></field></object>