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18K White Gold Ceylon Sapphire Ladies Ring

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18K White Gold Ceylon Sapphire Ladies Ring. Photo courtesy California Asian Art Auction Gallery USA

18k white gold ladies ring, containing one natural ceylon sapphire, weight 5.73 carats, measurements 11.60x9.45x5.78mm, cushion-shape, mixed-cut, in medium to dark blue vivid, very even color, very good cut and polish. Also contains 182 round, brilliant-cut diamonds total 0.65 carats in weight, average quality is: VS2-SI1 clarity grade, G color grade, very good cut and polish. Sapphire weight: 5.73 carats, Diamonds weight: 0.65 carats. Estimated Price$6,500 - $7,500

Includes Geological Laboratory Services certificate.

alifornia Asian Art Auction Gallery USAMagnificent Asian Works of Art. June 23, 2013, 1:00 PM PST


18K white and rose gold pink sapphire double halo ladies ring

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18K white and rose gold pink sapphire double halo ladies ring. Photo courtesy California Asian Art Auction Gallery USA

18k white and rose gold ladies ring, containing one natural pink sapphire, weight 3.46 carats, measurements 10.00x8.70x4.80mm, oval-shape, mixed-cut, medium to dark pink vivid, very even color, very good cut and polish. Also contains 110 round, brilliant-cut diamonds total 0.70 carats, average quality is VS2-SI1 clarity grade, H color grade, and very good cut and polish. Pink sapphire weight: 3.46 carats, Diamonds weight: 0.70 carats. Estimated Price$4,300 - $5,000

Includes Geological Laboratory Services certificate.

California Asian Art Auction Gallery USAMagnificent Asian Works of Art. June 23, 2013, 1:00 PM PST

A Blue And White Meiping Vase, Ming Dynasty period.

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A Blue And White Meiping Vase, Ming Dynasty period. Photo courtesy California Asian Art Auction Gallery USA

The body tapering from the high rounded shoulder to the gently spreading foot, covered on the exterior with a scene of kids playing around a fishing village setting, with river, fishermen, boats, and huts. Some cracks on the vase and base. H: 12 1/2 in (31.8 cm) Top: 2 1/4 in (5.7 cm). Estimated Price$3,500 - $4,500

California Asian Art Auction Gallery USAMagnificent Asian Works of Art. June 23, 2013, 1:00 PM PST

Maître de 1518 (Actif à Anvers dans la première partie du XVIème siècle), Vierge à l’Enfant entourée de sainte Catherine

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Maître de 1518 (Actif à Anvers dans la première partie du XVIème siècle), Vierge à l’Enfant entourée de sainte Catherine et de sainte Barbe.  Photo Tajan

Série de trois panneaux de chêne, formant triptyque, de forme trilobée à la partie supérieure. Panneau central : deux planches, renforcé. Panneaux latéraux, peints au revers. Panneau central (surface peinte): 89 x 58 cm. Panneaux latéraux : 90 x 24,5 cm. Surface triptyque ouvert : 100,5 x 139 cm. Fentes, restaurations anciennes. Estimation : 70 000 / 80 000 €

Provenance :Vente anonyme, Luzerne, 19 – 21 juin 1997 (Fischer), n° 2007 (Jan Van Doornik et son atelier) ;
Vente anonyme, Londres, 10 juillet 2008 (Sotheby’s), n° 115 (atelier du Maître de 1518).

Notre tableau est présenté sur la base du RKD sous le n° 195979 comme Maître de 1518.
Nous remercions Peter Van Den Brink qui nous a confirmé cette attribution, après examen d’une photographie professionnelle.

Tajan. Mercredi 26 juin 2013. Espace Tajan - 37, rue des Mathurins - 75008 Paris. Contact: Romain Monteaux-Sarmiento à la Maison de Ventes au +33 (0)1 53 30 30 30.

École Anversoise vers 1525, entourage de Barend Van Orley, Scènes de la Passion du Christ

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École Anversoise vers 1525, entourage de Barend Van Orley, Scènes de la Passion du Christ. Photo Tajan

Panneau de chêne, trois planches, non parqueté; 66 x 85,5 cm. Fentes et petits manques. Estimation : 60 000 / 80 000 €

Nous remercions Peter Van Den Brink qui nous a aidés dans la description de notre tableau.
Le nom d’Everhard Van Orley a aussi été suggéré.

Tajan. Mercredi 26 juin 2013. Espace Tajan - 37, rue des Mathurins - 75008 Paris. Contact: Romain Monteaux-Sarmiento à la Maison de Ventes au +33 (0)1 53 30 30 30.

Attribuéà Jacques Vigoureux-Duplessis (Avant 1680 – 1732), Scènes de Chinoiseries

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Attribuéà Jacques Vigoureux-Duplessis (Avant 1680 – 1732), Scènes de Chinoiseries : Enfants jouant avec des perroquets & Enfants jouant dans un jardin. Photo Tajan

Paire de toiles ovales; 80,4 x 98 cm. Estimation : 18 000 / 20 000 €

Provenance : Galerie Didier Aaron & Cie (Taraval), d’après une étiquette au revers.

Si la Chinoiserie fait référence à un « objet d’art, de luxe ou de fantaisie provenant de Chine ou exécuté dans le goût chinois » qui puisse être autant un dessin,
une gravure ou une peinture orné de motif décoratifs orientaux ou d’inspiration orientale. On peut constater que cette notion apparaît tôt en Occident probablement avant Marco Polo avec les voyages de missionnaires qui rapportent ces motifs ou les échanges commerciaux. Cependant, cette notion devient un vrai mouvement au XVIIème siècle notamment avec la construction du Trianon de Porcelaine par Louis Le Vau (1670, détruit en 1687) avant de connaître son âge d’or au XVIIIème siècle. Pour le Cabinet du Roi à la Muette en 1719 (aujourd’hui détruits et connus par la gravure), Watteau lui-même (1684 – 1721) s’exerce avec sérieux aux formes chinoises. François Boucher (1703 - 1770) à son tour se documente avant d’entreprendre en 1742 pour des cartons de tapisserie probablement commandés par Oudry alors directeur de la manufacture de Beauvais, les dix esquisses dont huit Scènes chinoises conservées à Besançon, (musée des Beaux-Arts et d’Archéologie).
Comme ses contemporains, Boucher fournit une quantité de suites gravées qui serviront de modèles dans toute l’Europe.
Cependant, la vraisemblance est rarement respectée : la Chine reste un monde irréel presque absurde, souvent bizarre. L’architecture est surtout connue à travers les paravents et la porcelaine. L’Europe entière est férue de chinoiseries, à l’exception peut-être de la Hollande et de l’Espagne. Si en France la Chinoiserie s’essouffle au profit du Néo-classicisme, en revanche, en Italie, en 1790, des frises peintes au Château de Rivoli adaptent des scènes chinoises aux lignes néo-classiques.
Notre tableau représentant des enfants à la peau claire mais aux allures vestimentaires asiatiques, aux coiffures sinisantes, jouant avec des oiseaux exotiques, témoignent parfaitement de cette mouvance et de l’importance accordée dans cette mode, davantage au dépaysement ludique et décoratif, qu’à la véracité ethnographique.

Tajan. Mercredi 26 juin 2013. Espace Tajan - 37, rue des Mathurins - 75008 Paris. Contact: Romain Monteaux-Sarmiento à la Maison de Ventes au +33 (0)1 53 30 30 30.

École française vers 1580, entourage d’Etienne Dumonstier, Portrait d’Henri III

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École française vers 1580, entourage d’Etienne Dumonstier, Portrait d’Henri III. Photo Tajan

Panneau de chêne, une planche, non parqueté; 39 x 31,5 cm. Restaurations. Dans un cadre ancien en bois noir et guilloché. Estimation : 12 000 / 15 000 €

Provenance : Vente anonyme, Paris, Palais Galliera, 23 novembre 1972 (Mes Audap, Godeau, Solanet), n° 22 (attribuéà François Quesnel).

Il existe de nombreuses versions de cette effigie royale qui s’inspire d’un dessin attribuéà Etienne Dumonstier daté de 1578, conservéà Chantilly, musée Condé.
Rapprochons notre tableau d’un autre Portrait d’Henri III attribuéà François Quesnel conservéà Paris, musée du Louvre (panneau, 66 x 52 cm).

Le double lambda placé sur le col du Roi est l’insigne personnel de Louise de Lorraine, épouse d’Henri III.

Nous remercions Alexandra Zvereva qui, après examen direct du tableau, nous a aidés dans sa description.

 Tajan. Mercredi 26 juin 2013. Espace Tajan - 37, rue des Mathurins - 75008 Paris. Contact: Romain Monteaux-Sarmiento à la Maison de Ventes au +33 (0)1 53 30 30 30.

Pierre Mignard (Troyes 1612 – Paris 1695), Portrait dit du marquis de Pomponne

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Pierre Mignard (Troyes 1612 – Paris 1695), Portrait dit du marquis de Pomponne. Photo Tajan

Toile ovale; 73 x 59,5 cm. Restaurations. Dans son cadre d’origine (accidenté et redoré). Estimation : 10 000 / 15 000 €

Élève de Jean Boucher et de Simon Vouet, Pierre Mignard se rend en Italie en 1635 et reste vingt ans à Rome où il devient célèbre grâce à ses nombreuses Vierges à l’Enfant. Dès son retour en France en 1657, ses portraits suscitent l’admiration mais il réalise également de nombreux plafonds pour les hôtels parisiens ainsi que la décoration de la coupole de l’église du Val de Grâce. Il se pose alors en rival de Le Brun qu’il supplante seulement à la mort de celui-ci en 1690.
Notre portrait est typique de l’art raffiné de Mignard : une présentation du modèle légèrement tournée vers la gauche qui met en valeur l’étoffe précieuse de
la manche droite, le soin apportéà l’exécution de la dentelle de la lavallière et la pénétration psychologique du caractère du modèle. L’artiste a voulu montrer un homme raffiné et autoritaire, probablement un homme de pouvoir, pour l’instant inconnu bien que dans le passé on ait voulu y voir le marquis de Pomponne, ambassadeur et ministre de Louis XIV.

Nous remercions Jean-Claude Boyer qui après examen de notre tableau en a confirmé l’authenticité.

Tajan. Mercredi 26 juin 2013. Espace Tajan - 37, rue des Mathurins - 75008 Paris. Contact: Romain Monteaux-Sarmiento à la Maison de Ventes au +33 (0)1 53 30 30 30.


Sebastiano Ceccarini (Fano 1703 – 1783), Portrait de dame de qualité avec son chien

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Sebastiano Ceccarini (Fano 1703 – 1783), Portrait de dame de qualité avec son chien. Photo Tajan

Toile; 101,6 x 76,5 cm. Enfoncement. Estimation : 10 000 / 12 000 €

Longtemps à Rome auprès de Francesco Mancini, c’est pourtant dans sa ville natale de Fano dans les Marches, que Sebastiano Ceccarini fonde une école de peinture. Répondant à des commandes pour les décors d’église de sa ville natale, il portraiture aussi la noblesse de sa région comme il le faisait à Rome.

Comme en témoigne notre tableau, Ceccarini apporte beaucoup de soins au rendu des vêtements, étoffes et parures. Nous pouvons rapprocher l’élégance de notre portrait au Portrait de dame noble avec son chien conservé dans une collection privée et reproduit p. 106 n° 41, dans Sebastiano Ceccarini de Bonita Cleri, Fano, 1992.

Tajan. Mercredi 26 juin 2013. Espace Tajan - 37, rue des Mathurins - 75008 Paris. Contact: Romain Monteaux-Sarmiento à la Maison de Ventes au +33 (0)1 53 30 30 30.

École vénitienne du XVIIIème siècle, suiveur de Luca Carlevaris, Arrivée d’un bateau dans la lagune vénitienne

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École vénitienne du XVIIIème siècle, suiveur de Luca Carlevaris, Arrivée d’un bateau dans la lagune vénitienne. Photo Tajan

Toile; 53,5 x 73,5 cm. Restaurations. Estimation : 10 000 / 15 000 €

Tajan. Mercredi 26 juin 2013. Espace Tajan - 37, rue des Mathurins - 75008 Paris. Contact: Romain Monteaux-Sarmiento à la Maison de Ventes au +33 (0)1 53 30 30 30.

Tommaso Piroli (Rome c. 1752 – 1824), Cinq allégories pompéiennes : Polymnia, la marchande d’Amour

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Tommaso Piroli (Rome c. 1752 – 1824), Cinq allégories pompéiennes : Polymnia, la marchande d’Amour. Photo Tajan

Gouache, plume et encre brune sur traits de crayon noir sur fond gravé; 46 x 36 cm. Estimation : 8 000 / 10 000 €

Certaines de nos figures sont identiques et dans le même sens à des planches gravées par T. Piroli (voir « Antiquités d’Herculanum », T.I-T.II-T.III, gravées par Th. Piroli, ed. Piranesi frères, Paris, 1804-1805)

Tajan. Mercredi 26 juin 2013. Espace Tajan - 37, rue des Mathurins - 75008 Paris. Contact: Romain Monteaux-Sarmiento à la Maison de Ventes au +33 (0)1 53 30 30 30.

Johannes Rosenhagen ( ? vers 1640 – La Haye 1668), Nature morte à la coupe Wanli, au verre vénitien, aux fruits et agrumes, et .

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Johannes Rosenhagen ( ? vers 1640 – La Haye 1668), Nature morte à la coupe Wanli, au verre vénitien, aux fruits et agrumes, et à l’aiguière reflétant l’autoportrait du peintre. Photo Tajan

Toile; 70 x 62,5 cm. Signée à gauche sur l’entablement : J. Rosenhagen. F. Au revers du châssis, une étiquette portant le n° II66. En haut à droite, une étiquette portant le n° 227. Restaurations et manques. Estimation : 8 000 / 12 000 €

Tajan. Mercredi 26 juin 2013. Espace Tajan - 37, rue des Mathurins - 75008 Paris. Contact: Romain Monteaux-Sarmiento à la Maison de Ventes au +33 (0)1 53 30 30 30.

Candida Höfer at Galleria Borghese

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Candida Höfer, Villa Borghese Roma XVIII, 2012. C-print. Print size: 70 7/8 x 81 in.© Candida Höfer/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn © Candida Höfer by SIAE 2013.

ROME - The Special Bureau for Artistic and Ethnoanthropological Historical Heritage and for Rome’s Museum Network presents the Candida Höfer at Galleria Borghese exhibition. 
The famous Galleria del Lanfranco hosts seven works by the great artist portraying the original reconstruction of the Borghese collection, which was restored to its origins during the I Borghese e l’Antico exhibition (December 2011 – April 2012, curated by Anna Coliva and Marina Minozzi for Galleria Borghese and by Jean-Luc Martinez and Marie Lou Fabréga-Dubert for the Louvre) which brought back to the Gallery the most important ancient art masterpieces that once belonged to the collection, mostly collected by Cardinal Scipione Borghese at the beginning of the Seventeenth century and currently making up the core of the Paris Louvre Museum antiques collection, following the sale imposed by Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte on his brother-in-law Camillo Borghese in 1807. 
Candida Höfer’s work therefore represents the only existing evidence of the collection in its original set-up, which will never be replicated again: some kind of miracle that will never repeat itself. The underlying concept of the exhibition is that out of the reconstruction of an art masterpiece such as the Galleria Borghese collection in its original makeup, another work of art was created. 
In that occasion Candida Höfer – known for her incomparable way of perceiving places and reproducing them through her camera – had therefore documented the mounting of the exhibition halls through the photos that are now in display in their original location, the Galleria itself. 
The exhibition curated by Mario Codognato, Anna Coliva and Marina Minozzi is an exceptional, unique event and will enable visitors to virtually walk through the halls of “The most beautiful villa in the world” - Antonio Canova’s definition - and experience the fascinating atmosphere generated by the exceptional return to their place of origin of the masterpieces of one of the most distinguished and prestigious archaeological collection of all times.
CANDIDA HOFER EXHIBITION
The seven large-size photos – roughly 180 x 200 centimeters – exhibited in the Lanfranco Hall, portray the Villa and reproduce the setting up of the seventeenth and eighteenth century, when sculptures belonging to the celebrated Borghese archaeological collection were still displayed in the Museum halls, in a charming sequence of images. 
Masterpieces such as The Three Graces and The Sleeping Hermaphroditus feature in Candida Hofer’s photos alonside masterpieces of modern sculpture, such as theThe Rape of Proserpina by Gian Lorenzo Bernini and the famous Pauline Bonaparte as Venus Victrix by Antonio Canova.
However, the true protagonists of these pictures are not only these extraordinary sculptures but also the Galleria as a whole: its history, its furniture, its works: all these elements make Candida Höfer’s photographs unique and the exhibition a one-off opportunity.
Candida Hofer’s photos stir up emotions thanks to their historical background, their perspective and the brightness of the place itself, defining its original aspects and raising the images to an eternal, absolute dimension.
The exhibition has been organised by Galleria Borghese thanks to Telecom Italia’s support and with the cooperation of Arthemisia Group. The exhibition has also been sponsored by Borghi Italia – Art Division, Axa Art, Arte Assicurazioni srl, Parco dei Principi Grand Hotel and Spa.
THE ARTIST CANDIDA HOFFER
Candida Höfer features among the most relevant artists of German contemporary photography. She was born in Eberswalde, Germany, in 1944 and is a leading exponent of “the School of Dusseldorf”.  She started her artistic career in 1975 taking then part in several international exhibitions, such as Documenta in Kassel in 2002 and Biennale in Venice in 2003, where she exhibited her work in the German Pavillion. Her works feature in the collections of many international museums, such as Centre Pompidou in Paris, Centro de Arte Reina Sofia in Madrid, Kunsthalle in Hamburg, Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) in New York, Kunthalle in Basel. 

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Candida Höfer, Villa Borghese Roma XIII, 2012. C-print Print, size: 70 7/8 x 79 inches (180x200.6 cm) Framed: 72 ½ x 80 ½ inches (184x204.6 cm)© Candida Höfer/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn © Candida Höfer by SIAE 2013

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Candida Höfer, Villa Borghese, Roma IX, 2012. C-print Print size: 70 7/8 83 ¼ inches(180x211.5 cm) Framed: 72 ½ x 84 7/8 inches (184x215.5 cm)© Candida Höfer/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn © Candida Höfer by SIAE 2013

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Candida Höfer, Villa Borghese Roma I, 2012. C-print. Print size: 70 7/8 x 85 ½ inches(180x217.2 cm). Framed: 72 ½ 87 ½ 8 inches (184x221.2 cm) © Candida Höfer/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn © Candida Höfer by SIAE 2013

Remarkable Asian antiques & Kenyan rhinoceros horns highlight International Maynards auction

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A magnificent large Achaemenid figure of a winged bull, the mythic beast depicted sitting with his legs folded beneath him, he is seated upon a rectangular base decorated in relief with lion and flowers. 16 1/2 in. h. x 23 in. l. x 7 in. w. (42 x 58.5 x 18 cm). Estimate $ 8,000-10,000. Sold for $32,200.

VANCOUVER, BC.- A magnificent Achaemenid figure of a winged bull fetched $32,200 and was a highlight of the 571 lots for sale at Maynards Antiques, International & Asian Art Auction today. The large silver figure was part of a group of 14 silver pieces owned by the late Iranian philanthropist and collector Mr. Habib Sabet. The fine silver pieces originated from the Sassanian and Achaemenid Dynasties, and were decorated with themes representing various royal dignities and courtly love. 

Also successful was a bust of a Sassanian King, thought to be Shapur II (A.D. 310-379) that sold for $20,700, and the large dish depicting scenes of kingly prowess, which fetched $10,925. Sabet’s 14-piece Sassanian silver collection sold for a total of $129,375. 

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A bust of a Sasanian King, perhaps Shapur II (AD 310-379), silver with mercury gilding, raised from a sheet of silver with chased and repousse details. The bearded King wears lobed earrings and wears a typical crenelated crown with striated orb mounted in a gilt crescent. height: 19 3/4 in. (50 cm). Estimate $ 8,000-10,000. Sold for $20,700.

We’re delighted with these prices,” says Hugh Bulmer, vice president of Maynards and Asian art specialist. “These pieces rarely come to market and it was exciting to see the level of participation from all over the world. We hope to offer more international pieces like these in the months to come.” 

The Sassanian pieces are the second group of items from the Sabet collection at Maynards. The first collection contained jade antiques which made dramatic six-figure record-breaking sales at the auction house in March 2013. 

In addition to the Sabet collection, a number of rare Chinese pieces were featured at today’s auction, including a Chinese Tianhuang stone mountain which fetched $41,400. A unique Chinese ivory carving of noted poet and beauty Li Qingzhao was also bought for $16,100, double its estimated value. 

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A Chinese Tianhuang stone mountain, carving in low relief with mountains, trees, bridge, and scholar with student walking on the way, and artist's signature of Yuan Zhu (Lin Yuan Zhu), Chun Shan Xing (On the Way in Spring Mountains), reverse side in low relief carving with landscape, with a Certificate of Gem Identification. Lin Yuanzhu (1864-1935), the second generation master stone carving artist of Fuzhou East Gate school, famous at seal head carving and relief; 2 3/4 in. h. x 2 1/2 in. l. x 1 1/2 in. w. (69.39 x 62.06 x 36.25 mm). Estimate $ 40,000-60,000. Sold for $41,400

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A fine Chinese ivory carving, of Li Qingzhao, a noted beauty and poet depicted standing by a table with a scroll, inkstone and brushes height: 13 in. (33 cm). Estimate $ 6,000-8,000, sold for for $16,100.

Possibly the most eye-catching lot up for bid was the lifelike replica, 1/32 scale, of the fully functioning HMS Royal William ship built over six years by local model-enthusiast, Victor Yancovitch. The unique ship exceeded its $9,000 to $12,000 estimate, selling for $18,400 to a bidder on the floor. Mr. Yancovitch says the majority of the sale will be donated to his wife’s local church, St. Peter and St. Paul Parish in Vancouver. 

Two notable pairs of Kenyan rhinoceros horns were auctioned off. One pair originated from a rhino that was shot by Robert F. Keeling in Kenya in 1906, when such activities were legal. The pair was then mounted by Richard Ward of Piccadilly London in 1964. It sold for above its estimate for $126,500. The other extraordinary set of Kenyan horns measures 11 ¼ inches in length and six inches wide. It also sold well above its estimated price at $74,750 at today’s auction. The entire rhinoceros horn collection sold for $262,200. 

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A mounted pair of rhinoceros horns, shot in Kenya in 1906 by Robert F. Keeling, mounted by Rowland Ward of Picadilly London (paper trade label and carved). Estimate $ 80,000-90,000. Sold for $126,500.

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A pair of Kenyan rhinoceros horns, circa May 1964 length: 11 1/4 in. (28.5 cm) and 6 in. (15 cm). Estimate $ 15,000-20,000. Sold for $74,750

We’re delighted with today’s results,” says Bulmer. “This was our first 11:00 a.m. start in several years and with it brought solid interest. We look forward to repeating this success at the next sale.” 

There was a total of more than 175 people who participated live at Maynards’ Vancouver office, with hundreds more taking part online and on the phone from more than 20 countries around the world, including the United States, China, Japan, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Britain and France. 

Georg Flegel, Memento mori au bouquet de tulipes, insectes, coquillages et pièces de monnaies

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Georg Flegel (Olomouc, Moravie 1566 - Francfort-sur-le-Main 1638), Memento mori au bouquet de tulipes, insectes, coquillages et pièces de monnaies. Photo ARTEMISIA auctions

Toile; 35 cm x 27 cm. Estimation : 80 000 / 100 000 €

Bibliographie de référence :
- I. Bergstrom, Flegel , dans L'Oeil, juin 1963, n° 102, pp. 3-6.
- S. Segal, “Georg Flegel as flower painter”, dans Tableau, décembre 1984, vol 7, n° 3, pp. 73-86.
- Hrsg. von Kurt Wettengl, Georg Flegel, 1566 - 1638: Stilleben, Stutgart, 1993.
- H. Seifertova-Korecka, “Still Life. Painter Georg Flegel and His Time”, dans Georg Flegel (1566 – 1638), Zatisi, Praga, 1994, pp. 178 – 187.
- A.-D. Ketelsen-Volkhardt, Georg Flegel, 1566 - 1638, Munich, 2003.

Si la nature-morte a connu, à partir du début du XVIIème siècle, un rôle de plus en plus important dans l’histoire des genres picturaux, c'est grâce aussi à l’œuvre singulière d’artistes comme Georg Flegel.
La critique la plus récente assigne, en effet, à ce peintre si rare le rôle de chef de file.

Apparus entre la fin de XVIème et le début du XVIIème siècle à Francfort, à Haarlem et à Anvers, les déjeuners monochromes sont le fruit d'un choix innovant de quelques peintres spécialisés dans l'insertion de fruits et de fleurs dans des toiles de vastes dimensions aux banquets, jardins ou scènes de marché.
La partie semble donc vouloir prévaloir sur le tout, et le microcosme symbolique des nature-mortes impose une pause de réflexion presque métaphysique au chaos turbulent des grandes scènes de la vie quotidienne.

L'expression nature-morte est la traduction du terme hollandais Still-Leven, traduisible par la périphrase nature au calme ; terme en usage déjà en 1650 pour indiquer la représentation de sujets inanimés.
Spécialement dans la première phase historique du genre, la mise en scène d'objets quotidiens, de fleurs ou d'insectes, est normalement caractérisée par de fortes valences symboliques.
Contenu moral ou symbole de la caducité de l'existence humaine, les éléments qui forment le tableau assument une identité objective, soit naturaliste, soit symbolique.
Un nouveau regard sur les choses nous approche à elles et en elles il traduit nos peurs, nos espoirs ou un message universel.

Georg Flegel naît à Olomouc, un important centre humaniste de Moravie qui, après Prague, se place au second rang des cités du royaume tchèque. Jeune, il travaille à Linz dans l'atelier du peintre hollandais Lucas van Valckenborch, connu pour ses scènes de travaux des champs, ses fêtes villageoises et les scènes de marché. C'est dans cet atelier que Flegel se spécialise dans le rendu détaillé et microscopique des fleurs, gâteaux, verres en cristal et vases en bronze richement ornés.
Quand il s’installe à Francfort et qu’il exerce librement le métier de peintre, les mêmes objets deviennent les sujets de ses nature-mortes, accompagnées d'insectes et de coquillages d'espèces différentes, comme dans ce Memento mori inédit que nous présentons ici.

Avec un effet savamment calculé de trompe-l'œil, un vase très étudié repose sur un entablement de pierre.
La composition florale est, elle aussi, très recherchée et se détache nettement sur un fond uniformément sombre. Au pied du vase, quelques monnaies, un coquillage, une petite grenouille, un escargot et un autre petit insecte complètent le message moraliste clairement anticipé par le décorum de ce vase.

Le médaillon visible au centre de ce dernier est, en effet, gravé non seulement de l'image d'un crâne et de deux fémurs croisés, symbole évident du temps qui passe, de la mort, mais aussi de la devise latine memento mori.
Les anses représentent deux béliers, probablement une interprétation des bucranes d'époque classique. Chez les Anciens mais aussi chez les Celtes, le bélier représentait, cependant, la force régénératrice de l'univers et l'origine de la vie.

Le temps qui fuit menace ici les fleurs, bien qu’elles paraissent resplendissantes et luxuriantes. Parmi elles, en effet, une ombre obscure s’est introduite, et déjà une d'entre elles, précisément la rose, au centre de la composition, montre les premiers signes de son déclin inéluctable.
Tempus fugit: c'est donc l'avertissement qui est ici lancé aux hommes.
Le message se prolonge dans la partie basse du tableau et s'adresse principalement aux choses terrestres, représentées ici par les monnaies éparpillées au sol.
A côté d'elles, l'indifférence des insectes et de la grenouille nous rappellent la vacuité de l’enrichissement.

Notre tableau appartient donc au corpus, très limité, des nature-mortes inventées par Flegel selon une mise en scène équilibrée, avec un vase de fleurs en position centrale et quelques objets ou créatures vivantes, grandes ou petites, à ses pieds.
La composition est calibrée dans ses détails, fruit d'un choix analytique qui reflète le caractère intellectuel de l’artiste.
Si l'un des buts est de vouloir rendre la scène la plus naturaliste qui soit, en réalité l'effet final est vraiment théâtral et artificieux.

Les vases en bronze décorés sont présentés normalement frontalement, pour rendre visibles en même temps les anses et le médaillon central. Celui-ci constitue le vrai centre de la composition, à partir duquel se diffusent les autres symboles.

À la fin du XVIème siècle, il faut mentionner la présence à Francfort d'une école d'études botaniques, incarnée de manière excellente par le botaniste français Carolus Clusius (Charles de L'Ecluse), qui y réside de 1588 à 1592. Ces études deviennent déterminantes pour Flegel qui connaît parfaitement le travail de miniaturistes comme Georg ou Joris Hoefnagel, qui collabore lui aussi avec Valckenborch.
Les exemples les plus proches de notre Memento mori sont la Nature morte au vase de fleurs et cristaux (Château de Cervena Lhota, Bohême), le Vase de fleurs aux cruches de cristal (ancienne collection Rafael Valls, Londres et surtout le Vase de fleurs, monnaies et grenouille (Cambridge, Fitwilliam Museum).

Datable des premières années du XVIIème siècle, cette dernière nature-morte est presque superposable à la nôtre, si ce n’est quelques différences évidentes dans le traitement spécifique des fleurs et de la partie basse du tableau.
En ce qui concerne les fleurs, c'est surtout la rose fanée qui manque dans la version anglaise, tout comme les deux tulipes qui figurent dans notre Memento mori.
En revanche, d’autres insectes et coquillages, d’une typologie différente, envahissent le microcosme qui peuple l’entablement en pierre.

Le vase est presque identique dans les deux versions, sauf quelques variantes dans la décoration et dans le traitement chromatique. Ces différences mises à part, le format vertical du support, l'atmosphère, le style, le trait, la diffusion de la lumière, le point de vue central sur la table ainsi que la qualité sont les mêmes. Un sens presque métaphysique de suspension magique gouverne ces deux peintures.

Les éléments qui dominent la scène, statiques et figés dans une sorte d’éternité parfaite, sont tous mis en pleine lumière ou placés légèrement dans l’ombre, selon un choix propre à Flegel.
Dans les nocturnalia, genre auquel se rattache notre tableau, le peintre privilégie une lumière artificielle, en évitant les nuances naturelles de l'ombre et les divisions réalistes en plans successifs.

Les masses et les volumes prennent forme par coups uniformes de pinceau.
Elles structurent les choses solidement pour leur donner une présence physique. Puis c'est aux touches de pinceau plus menues et grumeleuses de créer les accents toniques du tableau.
De telle manière que les masses peuvent vibrer à la lumière et assumer un aspect précieux et quasi magique.
La grenouille, l'abeille et les tulipes de notre peinture dérivent d’une série d'aquarelles conservées au Cabinet des Dessins du Staatliche Museum de Berlin.
Si ces études n’ont pas été créées comme des modèles directs pour les tableaux de Flegel, elles forment une ensemble documentaire unique, rassemblant les fleurs les plus rares au comble de leur beauté ; en hommage à la Création.

C’est d’ailleurs à la même époque, mais à Milan, que le cardinal Federico Borromeo, grand collectionneur de nature-mortes flamandes et hollandaises, confesse dans son étude Pro Suis Studiis, que la contemplation des peintures de fleurs le stimule dans sa méditation sur la perfection terrestre et la bonté de Dieu.
Finalement, les nature-mortes de Flegel font aussi surgir en nous l'admiration spontanée pour la beauté de notre monde.

ARTEMISIA auctions. Lundi 24 juin 2013. Drouot Richelieu - Salle 14 - 9, rue Drouot - 75009 Paris


Cornelis Mahu, Nature morte au pichet, sel et pâté& Nature morte au verre de vin et assiette de poisson

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Cornelis Mahu (Anvers 1613 – 1689), Nature morte au pichet, sel et pâté& Nature morte au verre de vin et assiette de poisson. Photo ARTEMISIA auctions

Paire de toiles; 60 x 85 cm. L’un est signé sur la lame du coteau C. MAHU. L’autre est sans cadre. Estimation : 20 000 / 30 000 € la paire

Les deux tableaux sont des reprises de Willemsz Claes Heda dont on connait d’autres versions soit par Mahu soit par Gerrit Willemsz Heda (voir N.R.A. Vroom, A modest message as intimated by the painters of the ‘Monochrome Banketje’, Schiedam, 1980, n° 239, reproduit en couleur, n° 278, n°360b, 360c reproduites, n°360d, n°360e et 360f reproduites).

Nous remercions Fred Meijer d’avoir confirmé l’attribution de nos tableaux.

ARTEMISIA auctions. Lundi 24 juin 2013. Drouot Richelieu - Salle 14 - 9, rue Drouot - 75009 Paris

AHAE, "Fenêtre sur l'extraordinaire"à l'Orangerie du château de Versailles

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L'exposition Fenêtre sur l'extraordinaire se tient du 25 juin au 9 septembre 2013 à l'Orangerie du château de Versailles, à l'occasion du 400e anniversaire de la naissance d’André Le Nôtre (1613 - 1700), l’architecte et paysagiste qui a créé les jardins de Versailles.

L’exposition prévoit d’afficher plus de 220 photos dans les galeries qui seront aménagées avec des cloisons conçues sur mesure pour la présentation des œuvres. L’organisation de l’exposition en reflète le titre, Fenêtre sur l'extraordinaire. Une masse incroyable de vie et de beauté ressort d’une simple fenêtre donnant sur un parc d’où ont été prises toutes ces photos.

Dans cette exposition personnelle, AHAE tente de dépeindre le rythme des journées, de la lumière de l’aube jusqu’au soir, à la nuit et au matin du lendemain, au fur et à mesure que sa ligne de vision passe des altitudes où règnent les éléments célestes et où volent les oiseaux dans le loin, aux landes terrestres peuplées d’animaux, d’arbres et d’étangs.

Tous ces tirages n’ont certes pas été pris en 24 heures, mais ils sont agencés pour donner au visiteur le sentiment de suivre AHAE pas à pas dans sa quête photographique et de vivre l’expérience d’une journée entière auprès de l’artiste posté derrière sa fenêtre en train de photographier le cycle de la vie de l’aube au couchant, jour après jour.

L’exposition se déploie sur plusieurs galeries, dont chacune représente un thème au cœur du projet « De ma fenêtre », imaginé par AHAE : les oiseaux, la terre et le ciel, les couchers de soleil, les nuages, les paysages nocturnes, les chevreuils des marais, les quatre saisons, les reflets d’eau.

L'exposition se déroule à l'Orangerie du château de Versailles, du 25 juin au 9 septembre 2013.

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Lucio Fontana (1899 - 1968), Concetto Spaziale, Le Chiese di Venezia

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Lucio Fontana (1899 - 1968), Concetto Spaziale, Le Chiese di Venezia - Sotheby's

signed and titled on the reverse, acrylic on canvas, 150 by 150cm. 59 1/8 by 59 1/8 in. Executed in 1961. Estimation: 4,000,000 - 6,000,000 GBP

PROVENANCE: Michel Tapié, Paris
Ada Minola, Turin
Renzo Cortina, Milan
Acquired directly from the above by the present owner

EXHIBITED: Venice, Palazzo Grassi, Centro Internazionale delle Arti e del Costume, Arte e Contemplazione, 1961
Bochum, Städtische Kunstgalerie, Profile I, Michel Tapié, Strukturen und Stile, 1963
Turin, Galleria Notizie, Opere scelte di Fontana, 1965
Turin, Galleria Martano/Due, Lucio Fontana: Opere 1938-1968, 1969, no. 18, illustrated
Toyama, The Museum of Modern Art; Karuizawa, The Museum of Modern Art Seibu Takanawa; Tokyo, The Seibu
Museum of Art; Fukushima, Iwaki City Art Museum; Amagasaki, Seibu Tsukashin, Lucio Fontana, 1986, pp. 77 and 116, no. 71, illustrated
Ferrara, Palazzo dei Diamanti, Fontana, 1994-95, p. 112, pl. 64, illustrated in colour
Venice, Peggy Guggenheim Collection; New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Lucio Fontana: Venice/New York, 2006-7, p. 103, illustrated in colour

LITTERATURE: Domus, no. 379, June 1961, illustrated on the cover in an unfinished state
Enrico Crispolti, Lucio Fontana, Catalogue raisonné des peintures et environments spatiaux, Vol. II, Brussels 1974, pp. 110-11, no. 61 O 48, illustrated
Exhibition Catalogue, Munich, Staatsgalerie moderner Kunst; Darmstadt, Mathildenhöhe; Bielefeld, Lucio Fontana, p.99, no. 81, illustrated
Enrico Crispolti, Lucio Fontana, Catalogo Ragionato di Sculture, Dipinti, Ambientazioni, Vol. I, Milan 1986, p. 373, no.61 O 48, illustrated
Giovanni Joppolo, Lucio Fontana, Marseille 1992, p. 119, illustrated
Enrico Crispolti, Lucio Fontana, Catalogo Ragionato di Sculture, Dipinti, Ambientazioni, Vol. II, Milan 2006, p. 557, no.61 O 48, illustrated

NOTE: A supreme example of Lucio Fontana’s tireless conceptual and artistic exploration, Concetto Spaziale, Le Chiese di Venezia exists as undeniable proof of the artist’s critical and innovative role in the history of art. This work belongs to the extremely rare and highly venerated Venezia cycle of paintings, which collectively form the crescendo of the Olii corpus that spanned over a decade of his career. Famously created in an inspired burst of artistic activity, the Venezia paintings have acquired a mythic aura within Fontana’s oeuvre. Like the legendarily enigmatic city that inspired it, Le Chiese di Venezia is enticing in its contradictions: its iconic composition both evokes figuration and epitomizes abstraction, while its resplendent form mediates between painting and sculpture. This particular work boasts an impressive provenance: first acquired by renowned critic and early supporter of Fontana’s work, Michel Tapié, the present work was then prestigiously owned by Ada Minola - the Director of the International Centre of Aesthetic Research in Turin. Having remained in the most respected private collections since its creation, the appearance of this work for auction denotes an exceptional event. Indeed, though standing alongside fellow constituents of the Venezia corpus that belong in the prominent collections of the Museum Ludwig, Cologne; Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid; and Fondazione Lucio Fontana, Milan; the present work stands out for its intensely evocative composition; one intrinsically linked with the physical landmass and opulent ornament conjured by its namesake.

By 1960, Fontana’s reputation was established among international art critics as a prophet of new artistic tendencies. Through the dramatic act of slashing his monochrome canvases, Fontana had forged his place as a forerunner of contemporary artistic innovation. In the first half of 1961, having been invited to contribute to the Arte e Contemplazione exhibition at the Centro Internazionale delle Arti e del Costume of the Palazzo Grassi, Fontana painted the twenty-two, one and-a-half metre square paintings dedicated to Venice. He knew the city well: the VeniceBiennale had exhibited his work since 1930, including a twenty-work retrospective in 1954, and he had many close Venetian contacts, including his dealer Carlo Cadazzo, the critics Berto Morucchio and Toni Toniato, as well as the city's Spazialisti artists. “Venice for Lucio Fontana was the island of art, of accomplishment, of international encounter” (Luca Massimo Barbero in: Exhibition Catalogue, Venice, Peggy Guggenheim Collection; New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Lucio Fontana: Venice/ New York, 2006-7, p. 27). Though he was well acquainted with the mimetic art historical tradition of depicting Venice, Fontana rejected the opportunity of presenting it in the manner of Canaletto or Turner. Instead, he took advantage of the inherent contradictions of “a city suspended between its imperial artistic and cultural past and a present, for most people, as a banal and sentimentalized destination for the masses” (Luca Massimo Barbero in: Ibid., p. 28).

Within an expanse of depthless darkness, two resplendent golden crescents seemingly expand and contract as our eye travels their elegantly curved silhouettes. Defining the centre of the canvas and holding the composition in perfect balance, these majestic forms are at once celestial and earthly - both cosmic bodies floating in space, and terrestrial masses rising from the blackness that surrounds them. Each of the twenty-two paintings from the Venezia cycle is unique in its composition, reflecting the incredible surge of creative energy that Fontana was channelling at the time.
Enrico Crispolti has described the forms found in some of the Venezia paintings as “a kind of imaginary topological description,” and indeed in the present work, the two dominant abstract forms resemble the islands of Venice itself, bisected by sinuous, flowing canals (Enrico Crispolti, Lucio Fontana: Catalogo ragionato di sculture, dipinti, ambientazioni, Tomo I, Milan 2006, p. 73). Though vehemently anti-figurative, the special title of this work, Le Chiese di Venezia evokes the countless churches that define the city of Venice - their mosaics, frescoes, stones and glass - and the centuries of cumulative dedication that is built into the physical core of that incomparable place.

By choosing the city of Venice as his declared inspiration, Fontana selected a metropolitan symbol for the full weight of Art History and a potent metaphor for culture itself. Although the composition, colour and form of Le Chiese di Venezia are ultimately abstract, Fontana's masterpiece evokes the city's eminent appearance and magisterial grandeur through subjective association. Built on dozens of islands in a marshy lagoon, the topography of Venice is half way between nature and architecture, inciting Fontana to perceive it as being a city in constant motion. According to Luca Massimo Barbero, “The entire series is located in suspended and eternal time, where matter is ‘devastated but solid,’ where everything implies motion and yet also architectural space” (Luca Massimo Barbero in: Op. cit., p.29).

The two islands of gold paint that confront the viewer appear molten like liquid metal. Fontana reserved his use of gold for only select occasions to effect sensational impact, laden as it is with traditional symbolism. Here it becomes the protagonist of the painting, equally evoking famous signs of Venice from the winged golden lion of St Mark the Venetian Patron to the dazzling, gilded mosaic interior of St Mark's Basilica. Consumed with incorporating light and movement into his canvases, the deep and pearlescent warmth of gold provided a means of integrating new spatial and spiritual properties. The cosmological significance of the Venezie is indisputable, composed as they are of “luminous, marine images of the gold light of the sun or of silvery reflections of the light of the moon” (Luca Massimo Barbero in: Ibid., pp. 34-5). Fontana’s contemporaries, notably Yves Klein, simultaneously exploited the transcendent qualities of gold. Klein’s first Monogold dates from 1959, and in the early 1960s Lucio Fontana purchased MG 42 for his personal collection. Three years after the Venezie, Fontana inscribed an Olio from 1964 with the message l'Oro è bello come il Sole! – “Gold is as beautiful as the sun!” Traditionally the most opulent and precious of metals, and believed across cultures to symbolise the powers of the sun, Fontana was utterly captivated by this material’s potential.

In June 1961, the present work was chosen to appear on the cover of Domus magazine, in an issue that announced the Palazzo Grassi show. While the editorial lauded the cycle as “a courageous fantastic vein,” it also drew attentionto the originality of “pictures not painted with oil…but with a new plastic material” (‘Milano, nello studio di Lucio Fontana’, Domus, no. 379, June 1961, pp. 35-38). In order to facilitate his extravagant working method it had been necessary for Fontana to develop new materials as the viscosity of conventional oil paint caused thick areas to sag and change shape during the lengthy drying period. Between 1960 and 1961 Fontana started to add a stearic-acrylic resin to oil paint as a hardener to achieve the unique impasto, which he could manipulate further during its faster drying time. This novel medium, “worked with every kind of mark in Fontana’s repertoire, responded exactly as he
required” (Luca Massimo Barbero in: Op. cit., p.28).

In addition to the sheer physicality of the painting's highly-worked surfaces, Fontana's drive to transcend his material by constantly regenerating it attests to his earliest training as a sculptor. Educated by his father to conceptualise in three-dimensions, to see the form held within a block of marble and the potential resident in a lump of clay, Fontana was not interested in the canvas as merely a window onto the world. Indeed, having completed the Natura sculptures in 1960, Fontana now worked his canvases horizontally and vertically, attacking both the front and back with his ruptures. Twenty-five years earlier Raffaele Carrieri had stated that "Fontana's story is the story of Fontana's ceaseless battle with his hands" and Le Chiese di Venezia should be considered as close to sculpture as it is to painting (Raffaele Carrieri, 'Le maioliche geologiche di Lucio Fontana', Illustrazione Italiana, Milan, 8 January 1939).

The lyrical constellations of the Buchi holes are arranged in an irregular halo around the outer edges of the golden half-moons, and distributed seemingly unsystematically throughout the gleaming ground. The raised rims around these gashed punctures describe how the artist incised the shape of the holes while the paint was still drying. In a prolonged and dramatic gesture, Fontana's knife has been punched through and twisted in the canvas over and again, ingraining forever the conviction of his visceral attack. As Fontana's unique and iconic Spatialist expression, the holes afford a glimpse into the infinite space of the void beyond the two-dimensional picture plane and become key to this masterpiece. Shortly after creating Le Chiese di Venezia the artist explained: "Even my Holes, Which could even be 'Baroque'...Are the sign for Nothing, for the Void" (the artist cited in: Italo Tomassoni, Per una ipotesi barocca, Rome 1963, p. 53). Fontana's holes bore through the stunning beauty of the canvas and pierce the sentimentality of aestheticism: what remains is the essence of his Spatialist concept. As he described in a precisely contemporaneous letter, this concept is, finally, the only consequence: "I think that Matter is important to the evolution of art...but the important thing, the most important thing is the Idea" (the artist in a letter to Jeef Verheyen, January 1961, cited in: Paolo Campiglio, Ed., Lucio Fontana. Lettere 1919-1968, Milan 1999, pp. 180-81). The Venezia paintings “set out to represent the Idea of Venice, above all the tension inspired by the memory of its appearance, so well known, so complete and yet so alluring” (Luca Massimo Barbero in: Op. cit., p. 32). In Le Chiese di Venezia the creation of the idea emerges out of the destruction, both physically and conceptually, of the canvas.

In order to appreciate fully the revolutionary significance of the present work it is also important to consider the context of Fontana's career. At this time the sixty-two year old Fontana, working at 23 Corso Monforte in Milan, had established a prodigious reputation for his Spatialism and stark artistic dialect. He had committed his career to denouncing what he had called "the nightmare of the art of painting which survives with all the excessive sensibilities of aesthetic research" (the artist cited in: Raffaele Carrieri, Pittura e Scultura d'avaguardia in Italia, 1890-1955, Milan 1955, p. 287). It was in strong contrast, therefore, that with the Venezia works at the beginning of 1961 he enlisted the legacy of the Baroque, its connotations of unstable excess, love of ornamentation and indulgence of the senses with such overt aestheticism as painterly virtuosity and associative iconography. “If the Baroque…was historically a period of high moral tension, and if its forms, in perpetual instable germination, are the fruit of an existential state of artists faced by an instable fickle century, in which every circumstance or belief was subject to swift change, then the Venices are Baroque” (Luca Massimo Barbero in: Op. cit., pp. 29-30).

By harnessing the populist mythology of the Queen of the Adriatic, Fontana was able to extend the scope of hisSpatialist ideas. Through abstract means Fontana creates a beautified sign for Venice: a mnemonic picture-postcard for the idealised dream of a collective fantasy. Having completely broken with traditional imagery he forms the idea and the essence of Venice as both psychological and physical place. By consciously referencing a sentimentality and kitsch produced by a mass-media, package-tourism culture, this is as close as Fontana came to an abstract version of a Pop sensibility. Whereas virtually all his other output surpasses the precedent of the picture-plane to forward Spatialist ideals, with the Venezia series Fontana further overcomes the precedent of aesthetics, History, Art and contemporary attitudes to culture.

In the forty-five years since Fontana's death a number of major retrospectives have progressively showcased the true genius of this artist, including Lucio Fontana: Venice/ New York at the Guggenheim Museums, in which the present work was included. The intensity of his creative spirit, inspired by a seemingly boundless innovative energy, along with the profundity of his concepts, and the versatility of his output all account for his reputation as the foremost European abstract artist of the post-War era. Although his art is ageless and his Spatialism is without comparison, he is also an artist of his time whose work finds parallels with that of other pioneers. His ideas on spatial experience and reinventing possibilities of the canvas correspond with Jackson Pollock; his referencing and exploiting of contemporary culture resonate with Andy Warhol; and his beliefs in the existential condition of humankind echo those of Francis Bacon. Le Chiese di Venezia distils the full force of Fontana’s capabilities, brilliantly demonstrating his relentless drive to further the possibilities of art.

Sotheby's. Contemporary Art Evening Auction. London | 26 juin 2013 - www.sothebys.com

Lucio Fontana (1899 - 1968), Concetto Spaziale, Attese

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Lucio Fontana (1899 - 1968), Concetto Spaziale, Attese - Sotheby's

signed, titled and inscribed Domani vado a Comabbio on the reverse, waterpaint on canvas, 73 by 60cm. 28 3/4 by 23 5/8 in. Executed in 1967. Estimation: 900,000 - 1,200,000 GBP

PROVENANCE: Donati Collection, Milan
Sale: Brearte, Milan, 29 April 1982, Lot 41

Vismara Arte Contemporanea, Milan
Acquired directly from the above by the present owner

LITTERATURE: Enrico Crispolti, Lucio Fontana, Catalogue raisonné des peintures et environments spatiaux, Vol. II, Brussels 1974, p.191, no. 67 T 39, illustrated
Enrico Crispolti, Lucio Fontana, Catalogo Ragionato di Sculture, Dipinti, Ambientazioni, Vol. II, Milan 1986, p. 660, no.67 T 39, illustrated
Enrico Crispolti, Lucio Fontana, Catalogo Ragionato di Sculture, Dipinti, Ambientazioni, Vol. II, Milan 2006, p. 856, no.67 T 39, illustrated

NOTE: Concetto Spaziale, Attese is a wonderful example of Lucio Fontana’s most iconic and celebrated series of works; the tagli or cuts. Executed in 1967, the present work came into being at the very height of Fontana’s career, a year after he was awarded the first prize for painting at the XXXII Venice Biennale, and almost ten years after the execution of his first slashed canvases. The technical perfection which he had achieved at this late stage of his career enabled him to successfully create this beautifully balanced and rhythmical composition. The whiteness of the canvas, which he regarded as the purest colour within the series, contrasts starkly with the black gauze - or teletta (Italian for ‘little piece of canvas’) as Fontana called them affectionately - which he placed behind each of the slashes. This seemingly unimportant feature of Concetto Spaziale, Attese was fundamental in the expression of Fontana’s ideas about spatiality and the Infinite. The artist himself had explained in 1961 how his “tagli are primarily a philosophical expression, an act of faith in the Infinite, an affirmation of spirituality. When I sit down in front of one of my tagli, to contemplate it, I suddenly feel a great expansion of the spirit, I feel like a man liberated from the slavery of the material, like a man who belongs to the vastness of the present and the future” (the artist cited in: Pia Gottschaller, Lucio Fontana. The Artist’s Materials, Los Angeles 2009, p. 87). The slashes in Concetto Spaziale, Attese produce this very same feeling. When standing in front of it one can almost sense the idea of this new dimension where time and space are a continuum.

Having trained and worked as a sculptor in his youth, Fontana never considered himself a painter but sought to blur the confines of painting, sculpture and even environmental art in his work. Like many other artists before him he was fascinated by the technological progress attained during the first half of the Twentieth Century. Einstein’s special and general theories of relativity had already caused a profound impact on artists at the dawn of the century with Pablo
Picasso and Georges Braque delving into the investigation of how to represent different perspectives - or moments in time - in a single artwork. In Italy, too, artists such as Umberto Boccioni became the artistic representatives of Filippo Tommaso Marinetti’s Futurist movement, which glorified the future, technology and progress. Like Picasso and Braque in Paris, Boccioni, alongside other artists such as Carlo Carrà or Giacomo Balla, sought to reproduce those ideas in their paintings, with Boccioni creating dynamic canvases such as his series of States of Mind from 1911 in which he captured the transient and chaotic nature of industrial life. He later turned to sculpture to represent all of these ideas in three-dimensional form, creating now-iconic artworks such as Unique Forms of Continuity in Space in 1913.

Lucio Fontana started his investigation of time and space much later, but his exploration was so revolutionary that it has been said he “challenges the history of painting. With one bold stroke he pierces the canvas and tears it to shreds. Through this action he declares before the entire world that the canvas is no longer a pictorial vehicle and asserts that easel painting, a constant in art heretofore, is called into question. Implied in this gesture is both the transformation of a five-hundred year evolution in Western painting and a new beginning, for destruction carriesinnovation in its wake” (Erika Billeter cited in: Exhibition Catalogue, New York, Salomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Lucio Fontana 1899-1968: A Retrospective, 1977, p. 13). Fontana took the representation of a new dimension to the next level by literally penetrating the two-dimensional picture plane to show the viewer a vision of the dark void of infinite space. When looking at Concetto Spaziale, Attese one can experience the transcendence of physical matter, retracing mentally the act of perforation that took place for its making.

This act is the culmination of the most precise of preparation processes. Fontana would choose his canvases very meticulously, having them made to order with specific instructions. He would then prime them and paint them with utmost care to eliminate any brushstroke marks. When the canvas was ready, he would stand in front of it, alone, the climax of the creative process having arrived. With a quick gesture, the artist perforated the pictorial surface with his knife; the motion of the blade lay suspended, captured in the canvas forever in time. Concetto Spaziale, Attese seizes this moment repeatedly and rhythmically, the cuts flowing like a lyrical composition. The present work is an arresting example of Fontana’s artistic mastery, which has been described as “an inexhaustible mine of discovery, creating a prospectus of art without classifications or hierarchies, projected towards future generations who perceive in him the potential for numerous and unexpected revelations” (Luca Massimo Barbero, ‘Lucio Fontana: Venice/New York’ in: Exhibition Catalogue, Venice, Peggy Guggenheim Collection; New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Lucio Fontana: Venice/New York, 2006-07, p. 21).

Sotheby's. Contemporary Art Evening Auction. London | 26 juin 2013 - www.sothebys.com

Lucio Fontana (1899 - 1968), Concetto Spaziale, Attese - Sotheby's

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Lucio Fontana (1899 - 1968), Concetto Spaziale, Attese - Sotheby's

signed, titled and inscribed Mario Bardini è tornato dalla Russia on the reverse, waterpaint on canvas, in artist's frame, 130 by 97cm. 51 1/4 by 38 1/4 in. Executed in 1965. Estimation: 3,300,000 - 4,500,000 GBP

PROVENANCE: Private Collection (acquired directly from the artist circa 1965-67)
Sale: Sotheby's, London, Contemporary Art, Part I, 26 June 1997, Lot 8

Acquired directly from the above by the present owner.

EXHIBITED: Rome, Galleria Editalia, Qui arte contemporanea, dieci anni, 1976-77, n.p., illustrated

LITTERATURE: Enrico Crispolti, Lucio Fontana Catalogue Raisonné, Vol. II, Brussels 1974, p. 161, no. 65 T 38, illustrated, and no. 65 T 125, illustrated
Enrico Crispolti, Lucio Fontana, Catalogo Ragionato di Sculture, Dipinti e Ambientazioni, Vol. II, Milan 1986, p. 564, no. 65 T 38, illustrated, and p. 582, no. 65 T 125, illustrated
Enrico Crispolti, Catalogo Ragionato di Sculture, Dipinti e Ambientazioni, Vol. II, Milan 2006, p. 767, no. 65 T 125, illustrated

NOTE: Elegant, columnar and utterly pristine, the six slender cuts of Lucio Fontana’s monumental Concetto Spaziale together evince a timeless expression of the Spatialist project through which the artist so radically advanced the course of art history. A progression of assured incisions across a pure white canvas, its brightness amplified through contrast with the plunging black recesses, this work is a perfect expression of Fontana’s search for "the Infinite, the inconceivable chaos, the end of figuration, nothingness" (the artist cited in: Exhibition Catalogue, London, Hayward Gallery, Lucio Fontana, 1999-2000, p. 198). Executed in 1965 at the height of Fontana’s truly ground-breaking conceptual dialogue, the present work masterfully balances spontaneity and control to dramatically breach the centuries-old paradigm of painting on canvas. The imposing scale of this painting, rarely preserved within the original artist’s frame, confronts the viewer with a spectacular interplay between pure white tableau and the six vertical black slashes that pierce through the monochrome expanse. At the command of Fontana’s deft Stanley blade, the perfected illusionism of the Old Masters and challenge to tradition of Abstract Expressionism are sacrilegiously ruptured. Attuned to a contemporary moment in which the ambition of cosmological exploration invigorated philosophy and an intellectual revaluation of space and time, Fontana’s dramatic rupture of the known and accepted parameters for representation delivers a thrilling visual metaphor: with his radical gesture Fontana choreographed a revolutionary dance with the unknowable dimensions of the void.

The artistic theory behind the creation of the tagli (cuts), and before them the buchi (holes), was professed in Fontana's first manifesto, the Manifesto Blanco, published in 1946. Here Fontana proposed the birth of a new Spatialist art which sought to articulate the fourth dimension. In this quest, Fontana proposed the artist as the source of creative energy, anticipating future events and engaging with technological advancement. According to Fontana, the artist's work should aspire to enlighten ordinary people to the possibilities offered by their environment and society. Ceaselessly engaged with the scientific and technical evolutions achieved throughout the Twentieth Century, he incorporated these ideas into his art with a dynamic exploration of method, material and medium.

Since puncturing his first canvas in 1949, Fontana had been singularly committed to the Spatialist mission to explore the conceptual depths beyond the limits of the two-dimensional picture plane. A few years following the punctures and piercings of the buchi, Fontana sharpened his gesture: the elaboration of the hole finds its definitive expression in the elegantly vigorous tagli which would dominate Fontana's oeuvre thereafter. This is as much a conceptual leap as it is
a visual one: with the space created by the slash standing for the idea of space without physical boundaries, the flat picture plane was undermined forever. In his last ever interview Fontana gave consummate expression to this revolutionary aesthetic venture: “I make a hole in a canvas in order to leave behind the old pictorial formulae, the painting and the traditional view of art and I escape, symbolically, but also materially, from the prison of the flatsurface' (the artist cited in: Exhibition Catalogue, Amsterdam, Stedelijk Museum; London, Whitechapel Art Gallery, Lucio Fontana, 1988, p. 34). By the mid-1960s the development and perfection of the Concetto Spaziale, Attese powerfully admonished this categorical restriction and dissected the very concept of painting itself.

In 1966, following the year Concetto Spaziale, Attese was executed and just two years before his untimely death, Fontana was awarded first prize at the XXXIII Venice Biennale for his pavilion, a temple dedicated to his spatial art exclusively inhabited by the most pure and essential artistic expression of Fontana’s career - the monumental white tagli. Indeed, it is this iconic format that has earned the artist international and art-historical renown. In navigating a
glimpse of the abyss, an insinuation telescoped most definitively in the opus of pristine white canvases to which the present work belongs, Fontana shatters prescribed spatial divisions. These works allude to the cosmic and foreground the concept that our presence in space is not bound to our conscribed environs but that there is something else beyond our ability to perceive, and that we might conceive of it through the power of art.

Passing through the very substance and ground of the two-dimensional, Fontana at once unites the hermetic parameters of easel painting with the three dimensionality of sculpture. In tune with cosmological advancement these works pioneer a dialogue with space and time - a discourse most prominently evoked by the artist’s stunning opus of blindingly white neon installations. Indeed there is a formal and conceptual parity between the present work and this experimental tenet of Fontana’s practice. The sequence of intensely sharp fissures here echoes the piercing beams of light criss-crossing at ungraspable speed in Fontana’s 1961 Fonti de energia. Attempting to emphasize progress and advancement, Fontana sought to create enigmatic circumstances for the manifestation of pure space and pure energy before his viewers. In harnessing the colour white - a chromatic signifier for pure light, energy and technological
advancement - and incising the serene perfection of the canvas’ surface, profound innovation radiates from Concetto Spaziale, Attese with unsurpassed clarity. Each slit is of almost equal length, the harmony deliberately upset by Fontana's angling of the cuts, and the squeezing constriction of the intervals in between. With nervous energy and dynamic force, space pulses through the openings; the blinding whiteness of the ground dramatically sets off the abyssal black the open incisions while the sharpness of the cut violates the pure unadulterated canvas field. As if recoiling from an assault, the edges of each slit curl inwards creating rhythmic recessions that lead our eye into the darkly imagined space beyond.

Created four years after Yuri Gagarin was launched into space and four years before Neil Armstrong would first set foot on the moon (an event Fontana would sadly not live to see), the present Concetto Spaziale is imbued with the artist’s unbridled enthusiasm for the incommensurability of space as endless and infinite, yet brimming with the promise of uncharted and boundless adventure. For Fontana, scientific advancement demanded parallel innovations in art, which he felt should extend into our surroundings. As outlined by the artist: "The discovery of the Cosmos is that of a new dimension, it is the Infinite: thus I pierce this canvas, which is the basis of all arts and I have created an infinite dimension, an x which for me is the basis for all Contemporary Art" (the artist cited in: Exhibition Catalogue, New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Lucio Fontana, Venice/ New York, 2006, p. 19). Representing the mature realisation of this conceptual conceit, Concetto Spaziale, Attese utterly defines Fontana’s pioneering innovation and revolutionary desire to further the very boundaries of our phenomenological perception.

Sotheby's. Contemporary Art Evening Auction. London | 26 juin 2013 - www.sothebys.com

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