check out
abaxion.com.
abaxion.com/statue.htm They have several of Freya (including the one you attached), Freyr, Loki, Tyr, and maybe others.
I like this one of an
earth goddess (tasteful partial nudity so I won’t attach the image)
I collect fairy statues though so I don’t want to break the theme! Are there any fairies in Norse mythology? (I don’t know what to call it. What’s the noun version of your religion? Vanic is an adjective right?)
Oh, woooow! What a cool site, and they have a statue of Lilith that’s based on the painting by Collier! I LOVE that painting!
You can just call it Norse mythology if you like. My tradition is also known as “Vanatru” (followers are known as Vanatruar), but other people call themselves “Norse Pagans”, “Heathens” (Asatru, which you might be familiar with, is one branch of Heathenry), or “Northern polytheists”. I don’t use “Heathen” because it implies a certain way of thinking, but “Northern polytheist”, “Norse Pagan”, “Vanic Pagan” or “Vanatruar” could all be used to describe me with varying degrees of accuracy.
The wikipedia page lists a lot of different groups under “Germanic neopaganism”, I’d recommend giving it a look see:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germanic_Neopaganism
Now to your question. We don’t really have fairies, per se, although some may see the alfar (elves) as a fairy-like being. The wights are usually seen as “land spirits”, but my impression is that they’re more like a
genius loci than beings who play pranks on people and abduct children. There are also etins (giants) who have a habit of marrying mortals (not all giants are necessarily destructive), but there’s no one being that does all the things that faeries traditionally do in Celtic lore. Sometimes it gets confusing because the term “alfar” is also used to refer collectively to one’s male ancestors. You might see the term “ljosalfar” (light-elf) to refer to the being and plain “alfar” to refer to male ancestors (female ancestors are known as disir).
There’s actually a book that’s been written on this subject from a Heathen perspective. It is Elves, Wights, and Trolls: Studies Towards the Practice of Germanic Heathenry by Kvedulf Gundarsson which goes through the primary sources and points out all the references to these beings. I’m told it’s written in a very “academic” style, but it’s one of those books that’s on every recommended reading list for Heathenry/Norse Paganism.