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Important sapphire and diamond necklace and a pair of sapphire and diamond ear clips, Bulgari, circa 1965

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Important sapphire and diamond necklace and a pair of sapphire and diamond ear clips, Bulgari, circa 1965 - Photo Sotheby's

The necklace designed as a graduated row of cabochon sapphires, framed by brilliant-cut diamonds, length approximately 410mm, unsigned, fitted case stamped Bulgari Roma; the pendent ear clips each with a detachable cabochon sapphire suspended from a surmount of foliate design set with marquise-shaped, brilliant-cut and baguette diamonds, signed 'BUL' and 'GARI' respectively on pendants. Estimation: 375,000 - 650,000 CHF

LITTERATURE: Cf: Amanda Triossi, Bulgari: 125 Years of Italian Magnificence, exhibition catalogue (Paris, Grand Palais), Milan, 2010, page 109.

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels. Genève | 14 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com


Petit coffret. Venise, vers 1500

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Petit coffret. Venise, vers 1500 - Photo Sotheby's

en cuivre émaillé bleu à rehauts d'or. Haut. 4.5 cm, larg. 6.5 cm; Estimation: 5,000 - 7,000 EUR. Lot. Vendu 36,750 EUR

RÉFÉRENCE BIBLIOGRAPHIQUE: P. Verdier, The Walters Art Gallery Catalogue of Painted Enamels of the Renaissance, Baltimore, 1967, no. 5, pp. 6-7.

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: Fond en émail peint bleu à rehauts d'or, le couvercle bleue et vert, l' intérieur bleu avec étoiles dorés.Le décor exquis de ce petit coffret en émail sur fond bleu, vert et blanc est tout a fait caractéristique des émaux Vénitiens du XVIe  siècle. Les palmettes formant une frise sur les côtés du coffret rappellent celles ornant le pied d'un reliquaire à la Walters Art Gallery de Baltimore (inv. n°. 44. 171). Un coffret presque identique appartenait jadis à collection Yves Saint Laurent et Pierre Bergé (vente 25/02/2009, lot 595, adjugé 20.000€).

Sotheby's. Important Mobilier, Sculptures et Objets d'Art. Paris | 09 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com

Very attractive pair of emerald and diamond pendent ear clips, Van Cleef & Arpels, circa 1970

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Very attractive pair of emerald and diamond pendent ear clips, Van Cleef & Arpels, circa 1970 - Photo Sotheby's

Each suspending a detachable pendant set with a pear-shaped emerald weighing 14.37 and 14.53 carats respectively, within a two row border of brilliant-cut diamonds, from a later added surmount of cluster design set with brilliant-cut and marquise-shaped diamonds, pendants signed VCA and numbered, surmounts with maker's marks. Estimation: 375,000 - 650,000 CHF

Accompanied by an SSEF report no. 65235, stating that emeralds are of Colombian origin, with minor to moderate clarity enhancement.

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels. Genève | 14 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com

Paire de chaises en hêtre sculpté et doré d'époque Louis XVI, attribuée à Georges Jacob et provenant du château de Fontainebleau

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Paire de chaises en hêtre sculpté et doré d'époque Louis XVI, attribuée à Georges Jacob et provenant du château de Fontainebleau - Photo Sotheby's

le dossier cintré et la ceinture à ressaut sculptés d'une frise de perles et de rais-de-coeur, reposant sur des pieds à cannelures rudentées et perlées, couronnés d'un panache de feuilles d'eau ; recouvertes de soie brochée à fond cramoisi. Quantité: 2. Haut. 91 cm, larg. 54 cm. Estimation: 30,000 - 50,000 EUR. Lot. Vendu 31,950 EUR

PROVENANCE: Commandée en 1786 pour le cabinet à la Poudre de Louis XVI au château de Fontainebleau

NOTE DE CATALOGUE
Les chaises du cabinet à la Poudre
Cette paire de chaises, bien que ne portant pas de marques de Fontainebleau, est d’un modèle identique à celles connues provenant du cabinet de Louis XVI dans ce même château. Le mobilier se composait de treize chaises dont « six à carreaux toutes couvertes de damas cramoisi à grands dessins ornées d’un galon d’or […] avec clous dorés et bois sculpté aussi doré, un écran à coulisse » (inventaire de 1792). Les sièges avaient été commandés en 1786 et décrits dans l’inventaire du château comme « les bois à la reine, cintre surbaissé, sculptés d’un rang de perles et moulurés de feuilles de persil, et dorés ». Par l’ordre n° 203 du 3 août 1786, Hauré avait reçu la commande « pour le cabinet à la poudre, pour la sculpture de douze chaises et une haute pour le Roy, les dites ornées de feuilles d’eau et perles, à raison de 16 livres par une ». Ce fut d’ailleurs Georges Jacob qui les fabriqua comme sous-traitant du menuisier J.B.C. Sené. Cette sous-traitance est confirmée par la présence de l’estampille de Jacob sur d’autres sièges des appartements de Louis XVI à Fontainebleau. Le doreur Julliac, quant à lui, factura son travail 819 livres. Sur ces treize chaises, hormis celles que nous présentons, quatre autres sont connues, estampillées de Jacob et portant la marque de Fontainebleau : elles figuraient dans l’ancienne collection de Madame Pierre Lebaudy (vente Ader-Delorme au Palais Galliera, le 15 juin 1962, lot 39, fig.1).

Le mobilier resta à Fontainebleau au début de la Révolution. Considéré comme précieux, il fut réservé, puis transportéà Paris. Les galons d’or qui le recouvrait furent décousus, puis brûlés pour en récupérer le métal précieux. Il semblerait que huit d’entre elles, recouvertes d’un lampas fond bleu dessin arabesque à cyclopes, ornèrent les appartements du Directeur Barras au Luxembourg. L’ensemble fut ensuite probablement dissocié, puis vendu.

 

Le cabinet à la Poudre de Louis XVI à Fontainebleau
Le cabinet fut bâti par Pierre Rousseau en 1785-1786 lorsque le roi désira avoir ses appartements intérieurs au premier étage du château, donnant sur le jardin de Diane (fig. 2). La galerie François Ier fut alors doublée, ce qui permit de créer cinq pièces principales, dont un cabinet à la Poudre, un cabinet de retraite, une bibliothèque, puis une salle de bains, ainsi qu’une chambre de repos après le bain. Situéà côté du cabinet du Conseil, le cabinet à la Poudre devint sous l’Empire la chambre de Napoléon. Le peintre anversois Piat-Joseph Sauvage peignit les dessus de portes, le sculpteur bellifontain Pierre-Joseph Laplace et son collègue Philippe-Laurent Roland participèrent sous la direction de Pierre Rousseau aux travaux de décoration.

 

Le mobilier du cabinet à la Poudre
Quant au mobilier, deux commodes de Joubert provenant du salon des Nobles de Marie-Antoinette à Versailles, ainsi qu’une paire de consoles livrées en 1786 par Benneman et assorties aux deux précédentes commodes, constituaient l’ameublement du cabinet (ill. dans Le château de Versailles raconte le Mobilier national, cat. expo., Paris, 2011, p. 111). 

Trois paires d’appliques à trois branches, à décor de vases, guirlandes et feuilles, une paire de chenets à feuilles de vigne, un fauteuil à poudrer et une pendule fastueuse complétaient la décoration de cette pièce.

Sotheby's. Important Mobilier, Sculptures et Objets d'Art. Paris | 09 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com

Seminal, large-scale masterpiece by Rothko fetches $75.1 million at Sotheby's in New York

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"No. 1 (Royal Red and Blue)" is seen by critics as one of the finest examples of Rothko's characteristic style -- a seemingly simple, but arresting juxtaposition of blocks of color. Photo: Sotheby's.

NEW YORK (AFP).- A seminal work by abstract artist Mark Rothko fetched a huge $75.1 million at Sotheby's Tuesday, while a new record was set for a Jackson Pollock drip painting as the big spenders came out in force.

"No. 1 (Royal Red and Blue)" is seen by critics as one of the finest examples of Rothko's characteristic style -- a seemingly simple, but arresting juxtaposition of blocks of color.

The winning bid, reached after a prolonged bidding battle in New York, was short of the record $86.9 million paid for Rothko's "Orange, Red, Yellow" at Christie's in May. But it was far over the pre-sale $35-50 million estimate and highlighted a contemporary art auction full of big prizes.

The work described by Sotheby's as Rothko's "seminal, large-scale masterpiece" was selected by the artist for his landmark 1954 solo show at the Art Institute of Chicago and had been in the same collection for 30 years before coming to market.

The heated auction also saw Jackson Pollock's "Number 4, 1951," estimated at $25-35 million, sell for $40.4 million, easily breaking the previous $23 million record for works by the abstract expressionist.

Francis Bacon brought it home with his dark "Pope" fetching $29.8 million, well past the $18-25 million estimate. The Irish-born British painter's "Study for Head of Isabel Rawsthorne" got $9.3 million, inside the low end of the estimate.

In other action, Gerhard Richter's "Abstraktes Bild" sold for $17.4 million, and Willem de Kooning's "Abstraction" sold for $19.7 million, compared to the pre-sale estimates of $15-20 million.

The always bankable Andy Warhol had a strong showing with "Green Disaster (Green Disaster Twice)," selling for $15.2 million, and $9.3 million for the Pop king's "The Kiss (Bela Lugosi)."

Warhol's "Suicide," estimated to sell for between $6-8 million, ended up at $16.3 million.

It was even an auction for some of the supposedly smaller fry to shine.

"Ohne Titel (Silverbild)," a stormy looking canvas done in silver, silver nitrate, silver oxide and resin by German artist Sigmar Polke, was estimated to go for between $800,000 and $1.2 million.

Final price? A whopping $4.1 million.

The roaring sale of contemporary art was in stark contrast to quiet sales of impressionist works at auctions in New York last week. On Wednesday, Christie's New York holds its contemporary sale.

On Monday, Christie's held a separate, $17 million sale of Warhols as part of a planned sell-off of the Andy Warhol Foundation's entire collection.

The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts announced in September that it was dispersing of its collection to bolster its grant-making capabilities, with Christie's the long-term partner. Some of the works will be donated to museums. sms/oh © 1994-2012 Agence France-Presse  

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Mark Rothko (1903 - 1970), "No. 1 (Royal Red and Blue)", signed, titled #1 and dated 1954 on the reverse, oil on canvas, 113 3/4 x 67 1/2 in. 288.9 x 171.5 cm. Estimation: 35,000,000 - 50,000,000 USD. Lot. Vendu 75,122,500 USD. Photo Sotheby's

 

PROVENANCE: Marlborough A.G., Liechtenstein/ Marlborough-Gerson Gallery Inc., New York (acquired from the artist in 1969)
Mr. and Mrs. David Lloyd Kreeger, Washington (acquired from the above in 1970, Estate no. 5018.54)

Richard L. Feigen & Co., New York (acquired from the above in 1978)
Sandra Canning Kasper, New York (acquired from the above in 1978)
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Heller, New York (acquired from the above in 1978)
Acquired by the present owner from the above in 1982

EXHIBITED: Chicago, The Gallery of Art Interpretation, The Art Institute of Chicago; Providence, Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, Recent Paintings by Mark Rothko, October 1954 – February 1955 (as No. 1)
New York, Sidney Janis Gallery, Mark Rothko, April – May 1955 (as Royal Red and Blue)
Washington, D.C., Corcoran Gallery of Art, Twentieth Century American Artists: 10th Anniversary Exhibition (The Friends of Corcoran), October – November 1971, cat. no. 69, p. 45, illustrated in color (as Untitled)
Washington, D.C., Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, The Golden Door: Artist Immigrants of America, 1876-1976, May – October 1976, cat. no. 44, p. 165, illustrated in color
Washington, D.C., National Gallery of Art; New York, Whitney Museum of American Art; Paris, Musée d’Art Moderne, Mark Rothko, May 1998 – April 1999, cat. no. 64, p. 141, illustrated in color, and p. 347, illustrated (as exhibited at Sidney Janis, 1955) [Washington and New York venues only]
Fort Worth, The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Declaring Space: Mark Rothko, Barnett Newman, Lucio Fontana,
Yves Klein, September 2007 - January 2008, p. 71, illustrated in color

 

LITTERATURE: Margy P. Sharpe, ed., The Collection of Mr. and Mrs. David Lloyd Kreeger, Washington, D.C., 1976, p. 244, illustrated
David Anfam, Mark Rothko: The Works on Canvas, Catalogue Raisonné, New Haven and London, 1998, cat. no. 503, p. 386, illustrated in color, and fig. 80, p. 73, illustrated (as exhibited at Sidney Janis, 1955)
Exh. Cat., Barcelona, Fundació Joan Miró, Mark Rothko, 2000, p. 16, illustrated (as exhibited at Sidney Janis, 1955)
Exh. Cat., Basel, Fondation Beyeler, Mark Rothko, 2001, fig. 13, p. 26, illustrated (as exhibited at Sidney Janis, 1955)
Glenn Phillips and Thomas Crow, eds., Seeing Rothko, Los Angeles, 2005, fig. 1, p. 27, illustrated (as exhibited at Sidney Janis, 1955)

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: “The progression of a painter’s work, as it travels in time from point to point, will be toward clarity: toward the elimination of all obstacles between the painter and the idea and between the idea and the observer… To achieve this clarity is, inevitably, to be understood” Mark Rothko, cited in The Mark Rothko Foundation: 1976-86, p.1

Pictures must be miraculous: the instant one is completed, the intimacy between the creation and the creator is ended. He is an outsider. The picture must be for him, as for anyone experiencing it later, a revelation, an unexpected and unprecedented resolution of an eternally familiar need.” Mark Rothko, ‘The Romantics were Prompted…,” Possibilities,New York, No. 1, Winter 1947-48, p. 84

As far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a light in the darkness of mere being." Carl Jung, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, 1962, chapter 11

The majestic summation of Mark Rothko’s legendary aesthetic language, No. 1 (Royal Red and Blue) stands as an ideal achievement of the sublime in abstract painting. This unrepeatable, inimitable masterpiece affords the privileged viewer a visual and somatic experience that is beyond comparison. The stunning aura of its brilliant red and orange surfaces is superbly countered by the intensely vivid blue rectangle towards its base; creating an alluring emanation that is impossible to reproduce in illustration. Indeed, it is almost as if this extraordinary painting is brilliantlyilluminated from within: a translucent vessel of pure color and light.

No. 1 (Royal Red and Blue) was the ultimate crescendo of Rothko’s first one-man exhibition in a major US museum, at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1954. The show was organized by one of the foremost champions of the avant-garde in post-war America, and the Institute’s first curator of modern painting and sculpture; the visionary Katherine Kuh. Every other work from that renowned event is now housed in a major institutional collection, except No. 6 (Yellow, White, Blue over Yellow on Gray), which broke the auction record for the artist when it was sold by Sotheby’s in 2004. In preparation for the exhibition, Kuh and Rothko corresponded extensively, originally in order to provide material for a
pamphlet to accompany the show. Having visited the artist's studio in New York, her initial request for paintings specifically singled out the present work, as she wrote: "I particularly want that marvelous large red one" (letter of June 3, 1954). When Rothko provided the final list of paintings to be sent to Chicago on September 12, 1954, he included prices at which they should be sold to the public (given that he had ended his contract with the Betty Parsons Gallery in the previous Spring, it can be assumed that these were his own figures). The highest price was for No. 10, 1952-53 , which, at almost ten by fourteen feet, was the largest canvas of the group by far, and which is now housed in the Museo Guggenheim in Bilbao. The second most valuable painting, as determined by the artist, was the present work, which provides resounding confirmation of the artist's very high esteem for this specific painting. Through the decades since its creation, No. 1 (Royal Red and Blue)has continued to captivate audiences as a pure icon of Rothko’s genius. It has been central to major Rothko exhibitions and was even selected as the key work for the vast announcement banner at the comprehensive retrospective at the National Gallery of Art in 1998. Among the 116 major works included in that show were many of the artist’s most iconic works, and the fact that the present painting was chosen in this way, acting as figurehead for the exhibition, further affirms its remarkable reputation.

Executed at the kernel of the artist’s halcyon era, No. 1 (Royal Red and Blue) is archetypal of his very best painting and its appearance here at auction, after three decades residence in a prestigious private collection and inclusion in comprehensive major exhibitions, marks an historic moment. Following the crucial turning point of 1949-50, when Rothko resolved an abstract archetype out of the preceding multiform paintings, the artist entered what David Anfam, the editor of the Rothko catalogue raisonné, has called the anni mirabilis: the first half of the 1950s, during which the artist’s mature mode of artistic expression pioneered truly unprecedented territory. The present work is critical and integral to this spectacular outpouring of innovation and is one of just twelve canvases that Rothko created between 1950 and 1955 on a scale to exceed nine feet in height. Indeed, the scale of this painting is absolutely fundamental to the most authentic experience of Rothko’s vision, whereby we become participants in his all-encompassing canvases, rather than mere spectators. A number of other constituents of this esteemed body of paintings are today housed in the some of the most prestigious museum collections of the world such as the Museum of Modern Art, New York and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.

At the precipice of a decade during which Rothko would redefine the very essence of Abstract Art, he wrote the following words in a published statement: “A picture lives by companionship, expanding and quickening in the eyes of the sensitive observer. It dies by the same token.” (Mark Rothko, “Statement,” Tiger’s Eye, New York, vol. 1, no. 2, December 1947, p. 44) Rothko thus asserted a fundamental equation between the artwork and its beholder, whereby the true potential of his painting could not exist without the presence of the viewer. When Rothko asked Katherine Kuh to describe her reactions to his paintings she wrote of the ones she had seen, including the present work: "for me they have a kind of ecstasy of color which induces different but always intense moods. I am not a spectator - I am a participant." (letter July 18, 1954). Rothko’s statement that it is the experience of a painting that completes the artwork; and Kuh’s concept of becoming a participant in Rothko’s art rather than a mere spectator stand as two core tenets that make the present work a masterpiece of his oeuvre. For our experience of No. 1 (Royal Red and Blue) as participants in its stunning drama brings it to life, and may give new dimensions to our life. We do not look at this painting; we are absorbed into it. Indeed, being in its presence parallels a line of Nietzsche that had inspired Rothko  since he had been a young man: “There is a need for a whole world of torment in order for the individual to sit quietly in his rocking row-boat in mid-sea, absorbed in contemplation.” (Friedrich Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy, translation by Francis Golffing, New York, 1956, pp. 33-34).

At over 113 inches in height, the scale of No. 1 (Royal Red and Blue) is sheer and monumental: broadcasting its allure on a greater-than human register; engulfing the viewer’s entire experience; and situating us as actors within its epic expanse. An apparent paradox typifies the artist’s ambition, declared in 1951: “I paint very large pictures…precisely because I want to be very intimate and human. To paint a small picture is to place yourself outside your experience…However you paint the larger picture, you are in it. It isn’t something you command.” (Exh. Cat., London, The Tate Gallery, Mark Rothko: 1903-1970, 1987, p. 85) Of course, scale is absolutely fundamental to the nature of Rothko’s work, identified as such by Clement Greenberg even in 1950: “Broken by relatively few incidents of drawing or design, their surfaces exhale color with an enveloping effect that is enhanced by size itself. One reacts to an environment as much as to a picture hung on a wall.” (“'American-Type’ Painting” (1955) cited in Clifford Ross, Ed., Abstract Expressionism: Creators and Critics, New York, 1990, p. 248) Indeed, Rothko wrote to Katherine Kuh to instruct the hanging of the 1954 Chicago exhibition, of which the present work was such an important climax: “Since my pictures are large, colorful and unframed, and since museum walls are usually immense and formidable, there is the danger that the pictures relate themselves as decorative areas to the walls. This would be a distortion of their meaning, since the pictures are intimate and intense, and are the opposite of what is decorative; and have been painted in a scale of normal living rather than an institutional scale.” (Exh. Cat., London, The Tate Gallery, Op. Cit., p. 58) Indeed, describing “Rothko’s desire to envelop the spectator with art that overcame its ambient space”, David Anfam cites as example the 1955 show at the Sidney Janis Gallery that this work was also included in and where “the stature of the pictures and their siting – wedged into the spaces – is instructive. They seek to displace their environment.” (David Anfam, Mark Rothko: The Works on Canvas: Catalogue Raisonné, New Haven and London, 1998, p. 73)

Three shimmering zones of color, which are simultaneously drawn together and held apart from each other by ethereal and imperceptible boundaries, dominate the canvas. The brilliant royal blue anchors the composition and works in magisterial chromatic concert with its exact complimentary color of vivid orange that pushes towards the uppermost limits of the canvas. The central royal red strip is tonally equivalent to the luminous sea of orange above it, yet works as an elegantly sophisticated horizontal axis that our eye is drawn to, between the two larger pulsating
expanses. Rothko applied paint in  diverse fashions; the rectangles, or objects, being achieved either by paint being spread out from the center, or by an outline thereafter being filled in, or by strokes being applied in parallel until the form was completed. As noted by Irving Sandler, “Rothko built up his rectangular containers of color from lightly brushed, stained and blotted touches which culminate in a chromatic crescendo.” (Exh. Cat. New York, Pace Gallery, Mark Rothko: Paintings 1948-1969, 1983, p. 8) Here chromatic resonance is attained through the meticulous aggregation of translucent veils of brushed pigment, with especially close attention paid to the spaces between forms and the edges of the canvas. Both despite of and due to their differences, the color fields equilibrate: the lure of one is immediately countered by the irresistible pull of the other as they reverberate over the fractionally paler ground. The layers of pigments concurrently hover indeterminately as three-dimensional floods of color in front of the picture plane, while also reinforcing the materiality of the painted object through their saturation of the canvas weave.

Through form, surface, texture and color Rothko has struck a perennial balance that lures the viewer's constant attention. There is also a certain tension struck between the uplifting emotions conventionally evoked by warm golden hues and something implicitly more tragic. Such elemental colors harbor primal connotations of light, warmth and the Sun, but inasmuch as they invoke the Sun they also implicate the inevitable cycle of dawn and dusk, of rise and set, and their own continual demise and rebirth. Rothko once stated to David Sylvester: “Often, towards nightfall, there’s a feeling in the air of mystery, threat, frustration – all of these at once. I would like my painting to have the quality ofsuch moments.” (in David Anfam, Op. Cit., p. 88), and with its suggestion of an unobtainable horizon and an infinite, unbreakable cycle, this work harbors something that is indescribably portentous.

While much contemporary commentary cited Rothko’s oeuvre as radically dislocated from historical precedent, subsequent perspective readily posits his oeuvre an eminent historical location. From J.M.W. Turner, Caspar David Friedrich and Claude Monet to the Luminists, Pierre Bonnard and Henri Matisse; predecessors concerned with the pure effects of color from decades and centuries past informed the new painting Rothko initiated in mid-century New York. Perhaps foremost among these was Matisse, whose own practice had so radically redefined relationships between form and color, and as Robert Rosenblum has pointed out: “it dawned on many of Rothko’s admirers that his dense seas of color might not have existed without the example of Matisse, a point the artist himself acknowledged.” (Exh. Cat., London, The Tate Gallery, Op. Cit., p. 22)

It is well documented that Rothko was fixated with the literary work of Friedrich Nietzsche, above all the German philosopher's seminal opus The Birth of Tragedy from the Spirit of Music written in 1872. Nietzsche’s ideas of how the tension between Apollonian and Dionysian forces dictates the terms of human drama were important to the advancement of Rothko's color fields. Indeed, Rothko’s vast tableaux have often been discussed in the lexicon of the immediate and saturating effects of music. David Sylvester’s review of the 1961 Whitechapel Gallery exhibition in London provides an apt response to the present work in these terms: “These paintings begin and end with an intense and utterly direct expression of feeling through the interaction of colored areas of a certain size. They are the complete fulfillment of Van Gogh’s notion of using color to convey man’s passions. They are the realisation of what abstract artists have dreamed for 50 years of doing – making painting as inherently expressive as music. More than this: for not even with music…does isolated emotion touch the nervous system so directly.” (in New Statesman, 20 October 1961 cited in Exh. Cat., London, The Tate Gallery, Op. Cit., p. 36)

Excepting a letter to Art News in 1957, from 1949 onwards Rothko ceased publishing statements about his work, anxious that his writings might be interpreted as instructive or didactic and could thereby interfere with the pure import of the paintings themselves. However, in 1958 he gave a talk at the Pratt Institute to repudiate his critics and to deny any perceived association between his art and self-expression. He insisted instead that his corpus was not concerned with notions of self but rather with the entire human drama. While he drew a distinction between figurative and abstract art, he nevertheless outlined an underlying adherence to the portrayal of human experience. Discussing the “artist’s eternal interest in the human figure”, Rothko examined the common bond of figurative painters throughout Art History: “they have painted one character in all their work. What is indicated here is that the artist’s real model is an ideal which embraces all of human drama rather than the appearance of a particular individual. Today the artist is no longer constrained by the limitation that all of man’s experience is expressed by his outward appearance. Freed from the need of describing a particular person, the possibilities are endless. The whole of man’s experience becomes his model, and in that sense it can be said that all of art is a portrait of an idea.” (lecture given at the Pratt Institute 1958, cited in Exh. Cat., London, The Tate Gallery, Op. Cit., p. 87)

 

 

Bonhams Hong Kong to offer The Paul Braga Collection of snuff bottles on 24 November

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Paul Braga snuff bottles. Photo: Bonhams. Photo: Bonhams

HONG KONG.-Bonhams, the leading international auction house for Chinese snuff bottles, announces the sale of the Paul Braga Collection of Snuff Bottles on 24 November 2012 at the Island Shangri-La Hotel.

The Paul Braga Collection provides a window into old Hong Kong, a bygone age when snuff bottles were displayed in baskets in antique shops and could be bought for several dollars each. Paul Braga was a true connoisseur in an era when little of substance was published on the subject, and the holdings from the former Imperial collection in Beijing and Taipei had yet to be published. Using his own eye and experience, he built up his collection and popularised the subject, collaborating with fellow collectors to organise the first exhibition of snuff bottles in the Hong Kong Museum of Art in 1977.

The Braga family had their roots in Macau, tracing back to 1708, when an ancestor was posted from Lisbon as Chief Justice. The twentieth century was a tumultuous period for them, with fortunes lost and regained. After the Japanese invaded Hong Kong, he escaped with his young family on an epic trek through southern China, eventually hitching a ride from Kunming to India with the ‘Flying Tigers’, the American Volunteer Group who established an air route for supplies to assist the Chinese resistance after the fall of the Burma Road.

The collection consists of 170 snuff bottles and is remarkable for the diversity of its material, with rare examples of semi-precious materials and obscure hardstones in addition to standard categories of jade, glass, porcelain and agate. The star lot of the collection is a famille-rose snuff bottle, produced at the Imperial kilns, Jingdezhen. Just 4.2cm high, it is brilliantly enamelled with lotus and chrysanthemum flowers, and bears a particularly rare four-character Qianlong seal mark only found on the highest quality porcelain snuff bottles commissioned by the Imperial court. The only other known example of this form and design, with identical reign mark, originally in the Qing Court Collection is still preserved in the Palace Museum, Beijing. It is estimated at HK$400,000-800,000 (US$50,000-100,000).

Highlights of the auction include: 

Nouveau_Dessin_OpenDocument

Lot 33. A 'famille-rose' enamel on porcelain 'lotus and chrysanthemum' snuff bottle. Imperial kilns, Jingdezhen, Qianlong iron-red four-character seal mark and of the period. Photo Bonhams

Of compressed globular form with a short waisted neck, resting on a slightly concave oval foot, brilliantly enamelled with two lotus flowers on the central body and two chrysanthemum at the sides, surrounded by stylised floral scroll, set against a dense and vivid ground of tighter formalised floral scroll picked out in iron-red, all below a turquoise ruyi-shaped collar at the neck and above a band of lappets at the foot, the neck decorated with a stylised floral scroll in gold against an orange-beige ground, the base inscribed in iron-red with four-character mark within a square. 4.2cm high. Estimate: HK$300,000-500,000 

ExhibitedChinese Snuff Bottles, jointly presented by Hong Kong Chinese Snuff Bottle Collectors Study Group and the Urban Council, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Museum of Art, 15 October to 26 November 1977

Illustrated: Paul Braga, Hong Kong Chinese Snuff Bottle Collectors, Arts of Asia, November-December 1976, Vol.6, p.84
The International Chinese Snuff Bottle Society Journal, Vol.10, Number 2, JICSBS, June 1978, p.44, pl.91
Chinese Snuff Bottles, Hong Kong Museum of Art, Hong Kong, 1977, p.52, pl.91

The only published comparable example appears to be a very closely related snuff bottle from the Qing court collection, preserved in the Palace Museum, Beijing, illustrated in The Complete Collection of Treasures of the Palace Museum 47, Snuff Bottles, Hong Kong, 2003, p.195, pl.305 (fig.1). The Palace Museum example shares the same four-character reign mark inscribed in iron-red enamels, and is enamelled with identical decorative schemes, differing from the current lot only at the neck where the Palace Museum example is enamelled with stylised floral scrolls.

The distinct four-character Qianlong reign mark on this bottle is shared by two other bottles from the Mary and George Bloch collection, illustrated in Moss, Graham and Tsang A Treasury of Chinese Snuff Bottles: The Mary and George Bloch Collection, Vol.6, Arts of the Fire, Hong Kong, 2008, pp.335-342, nos.1150 and 1151. The latter is a 'double-gourd' snuff bottle that was sold in these rooms, 23 November 2010, lot 121, and illustrated on the cover. The authors present a compelling argument that these two snuff bottles were most likely produced under the supervision of Tang Ying in the early Qianlong period. This argument can be applied to the current lot, which is endowed with an enamelled design of similar exquisite quality, with a similarly meticulous floral design and floral ground.

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Lot24. A black and white double-overlay on turquoise ground glass 'Legend of the White Snake' snuff bottle, Qing dynasty, 1780-1820. Photo Bonhams

Of compressed globular shape supported on a ringed oval foot, intricately carved as a double overlay with a continuous landscape scene carved from the black and white overlays, featuring the tale of baishejuan, all against a brilliant turquoise ground and beneath downward leaf lappets at the neck. 6cm high - Estimate: HK$100,000 - 150,000 

ExhibitedChinese Snuff Bottles, jointly presented by Hong Kong Chinese Snuff Bottle Collectors Study Group and the Urban Council, Hong Kong, Hong Kong Museum of Art, 15 October to 26 November 1977

Illustrated: Bob Stevens, Snuff Bottles, New York, 1976, p.73, pl.230
Chinese Snuff Bottles, Hong Kong Museum of Art, Hong Kong, 1977, pp.27 & 123, pl.18

The scene depicted on the current snuff bottle is taken from the Legend of the White Snake, which was composed during or before the Southern Song dynasty. The story tells of a young literati Xu Xian, who falls in love with a thousand year old white snake spirit named Bai Suzhen. A monk named Fa Hai tries to stop the romance between a human and an immortal, forcing Bai to reveal her true identity in front of Xu, which scares him to death. Bai tries to save Xu by stealing the essence of vitality from the heavens to revive Xu. However ,upon revival he is caught by Fa and locked away at Jin Mountain. In anger, Bai besieges Jin Mountain and tries to rescue Fa by causing a great flood. The flood causes countless deaths which angers the high heavens, which punish Bai by imprisoning her in Leifeng pagoda. Before her imprisonment, Bai gives birth to their son, which in future will return to rescue Bai.

It is extremely challenging for the glass carver to carve a double-overlay snuff bottle of this form. It requires considerable plan and the design must be pre-determined in advance. The amount of time and preparatory work contribute to the rarity of double-overlay snuff bottles like the current lot, especially with such exquisite craftsmanship and the incorporation of such a wide variety of colours. 

For a closely related example of this rare group see Moss, Graham and Tsang, A Treasury of Chinese Snuff Bottles: The Mary and George Bloch Collection, Vol.5, Glass, Hong Kong, 1995, pp.680-681, no.1003, and sold in these rooms, 27 May 2012, lot 7. The authors refer to the current lot as being 'the only other of this particular and imposing colour combinatiom'. In their dicussions of no.1002, ibid, pp.677-678, another double-overlay glass snuff bottle in green, white and blue with a scene of Zhuge Jun in a pavilion, they argue that this group of bottles, all characterised by plantain-leaf borders round the neck, are clearly the work of the same production team. The fact that another closely related double-overlay bottle from the Barron Collection is inscribed 'a gift from the Inner (Palace) of the Qianlong Emperor' suggests that this entire group possibly dates from the late Qianlong period.

 

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Lot 1. A Baltic amber snuff bottle. Qing dynasty, 1740–1840. Photo Bonhams

Of flattened rectangular section, rising to a cylindrical neck from a wide oval foot, with organic inclusions in shades of russet and creamy caramel streaking across the body. 6.1cm high. Estimate: HK$20,000 - 30,000 

Illustrated: Paul Braga, Hong Kong Chinese Snuff Bottle Collectors, Arts of Asia, November-December 1976, Vol.6, No.6, p.85. 

Baltic amber belongs to the amber family, translucent in appearance and found around the Baltic region. It is characterised by its rich yellow tone, commonly referred to asjiyouhuang or 'chicken oil yellow', and is harvested from fossilised tree resin which has endured intense high pressure and heat underground for thousands of years. 

Such rare material was extremely valuable to the Qing court, where it was prized for its natural beauty. For a closely related amber snuff bottle in the National Palace Museum, Taipei, illustrated with its original lacquer box, see Snuff Bottles in the Collection of the National Palace Museum, Taipei, 1991, p.254, pl.378.

See also a related example in the Mary and George Bloch collection, illustrated by Moss, Graham and Tsang, A Treasury of Chinese Snuff Bottles: The Mary and George Bloch Collection, Vol.7, Hong Kong, 2009, pp.277-278, no.1574, and sold in these rooms, 25 May 2011, lot 71.

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Lot 11. An inside-painted glass 'crane and landscape' snuff bottle. Zhou Leyuan, dated 1892. Photo Bonhams

Of rectangular rounded form with gently sloping shoulders, painted on the inside with a continuous scene of a crane perching on rockwork under a plum blossom tree, the background with further bamboo growths. 6cm high. Estimate: HK$40,000 - 60,000 

Zhou Leyuan (active 1882-1893) liked to imitate the spirit of the great masters by combining them with his own painting style. His technique also bore the characteristics of the Five Dynasties Masters Dong Yuan (?-962) and Ju Ran (unknown) of drawing small stones on the summits of mountains, such as the painting of 'Xiao and Xiang Rivers' by Dong Yuan, which is preserved in the Palace Museum, Beijing.

One of the inscriptions can be paraphrased as "in the snowy weather, a crane will stay guarding the plum blossoms", which is in reference to the Northern Song poet Lin Bu (967-1028), who devoted his time to planting plums and raising cranes. 

The genre of "crane and landscape" was always painted towards the later period of Zhou Leyuan's life. Among all the existing Zhou's "crane and landscape" snuff bottles, a closely related example from the Humphrey K. F. Hui collection has the closest resemblance to the current lot in terms of the subject matter, poem and dating. See Inkplay in Microcosm: Inside-Painted Chinese Snuff Bottles, The Humphrey K. F. Hui Collection, Chinese University of Hong Kong, Art Museum, Hong Kong, 2002, pl.21.

Compare also a similar snuff bottle by Ye Zhongsan, illustrated in Moss, Graham & Tsang, A Treasure of Chinese Snuff Bottles: The Mary and George Bloch Collection, Vol.4, Inside-Painted, Hong Kong, 2000, pp.190-191, no.504.

Francis Bacon (1909 - 1992), Untitled (Pope)

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Francis Bacon (1909 - 1992), Untitled (Pope) - Photo Sotheby's

oil on canvas; 59 7/8 x 37 in. 152 x 94 cm. Executed circa 1954. Estimation: 18,000,000 - 25,000,000 USD. Lot. Vendu 29,762,500 USD

This work will be included in the forthcoming Francis Bacon Catalogue Raisonné, being prepared by The Estate of Francis Bacon and edited by Martin Harrison. 

PROVENANCE: Galerie Claude Bernard, Paris
Galleria Galatea, Turin
Galerie Krugier, Geneva
Private Collection, Geneva
Sotheby Parke Bernet & Co., London, December 4,1975, Lot 238
Acquired by the present owner from the above 

EXHIBITED: Geneva, Musée Rath, Musées d'Art et d'Histoire de Geneva , L’Art XXe Siècle dans les Collections Genevoises, June- September 1973, cat. no. 176, p. 164, illustrated 

LITTERATURE: Monelle Hayot, "Marché de l'art: Artistes contemporains britanniques," L’Oeil, nos. 270-271, Paris, January - February
1978, p. 83, illustrated 

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: “Terror and atrocious suffering make the mouth an organ of searing screams.” Georges Bataille, ‘Dictionnaire – Bouche’, Documents, No. 5, 1930, pp. 298-99

Great art is always a way of concentrating, reinventing what is called fact, what we know of our existence….tearing away the veils that fact acquires through time.” Francis Bacon interviewed by Hugh Davies, June 26, 1973, in Hugh Davies and Sally Yard, Francis Bacon, New York,
1986, p. 110

Consciousness of mortality sharpens one’s sense of existing.” Francis Bacon interviewed by Hugh M. Davies in 1973, in Martin Harrison, ed., Francis Bacon: New Studies, Göttingen, 2009, p. 96 

It is perhaps the most singularly devastating personification in figural art of the post-war period. It is a vision so universal and immediate that it threatens to traverse the threshold between viewer and object, simultaneously leaping into our domain and sucking us into its own. It is an unrepeatable image, borne specifically of its time and of the unique experiences of its creator, yet stands as an allegory for perpetuity. Emerging from the desolate shadows of the Second World War and its abject annihilation of over fifty million souls, a Pope looms forth from the depths of Francis Bacon’s formidable genius and draws near, into our focus. The Vicar of Christ, Successor of Saint Peter and God’s temporal representative on earth; this Supreme Pontiff has transmogrified into a chimera of awesome terror. It has become the anguished epitome of humanity’s excruciating scream: deafening to our collective interior, yet silent in the existential void. Encaged within insufferable isolation, this Pope - totem of enlightened perception, of authoritative faith, of order against chaos - is violently racked by the brutal fact of the human condition. It is the proposition of a world turned upside down, of established systems shattered, and, as such, is the perfect response to Theodor
Adorno’s legendary 1951 axiom “There can be no poetry after Auschwitz.” Having remained in the same private collection for over thirty years and hidden from public view, this painting embodies, of course, Bacon’s most celebrated and recognizable iconography. Even more than this, as a Pope it crystallizes a thunderous climax in the long arc of that elusive and indefinable engine of innovation known as artistic genius. Within the Twentieth Century, perhaps only Picasso’s Guernica, with its monumental, monochrome nightmare apparition of a Nativity scene being torn apart by massacre, parallels the impossible figurative potency of Bacon’s Screaming Popes. 

The phenomenal specter of papal imagery and its inspiration had seeped into Bacon’s work since the end of the 1940s, but the present painting is more precisely allied to his most revered cycle of Popes; the eight Study for Portraits that were executed in the summer of 1953 for his first exhibition outside England, at Durlacher Brothers Gallery in New York in October to November of that year. Constituents of this corpus today reside in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Hirshhorn Museum, the Minneapolis Institute and the Lehman Loeb Art Center. However, it is to the seminal masterpiece Study after Velázquez’s Portrait of Pope Innocent X of 1953, housed in the Des Moines Art Center, that the present work bears especially close parity. In terms of the composition of space, the bodily expression and the figure’s portrait, the two paintings harbor close formal correspondence. Indeed, the visceral physiognomic intensity of the contorted features and flashing teeth of the gaping mouth in the present canvas, so deftly fashioned by the artist’s daubs of writhing paint, achieves a heightened psychological import – shooting the desperate papal cry straight into the realm of the viewer – that surpasses any of the eight Studies and is matched only by the Des Moines work. Bacon’s painting here is unleashed and urgent, unencumbered by any stodgy deliberation or revision, and his unbridled protagonist delivers a primal clarion call that summons Georges Bataille’s potent proclamation: “Terror and atrocious suffering make the mouth an organ of searing screams.” (Georges Bataille, ‘Dictionnaire – Bouche’, Documents, No. 5, 1930, pp. 298-99) 

Bacon’s typically eloquent declaration that he wanted to “unlock the valves of feeling and therefore return the onlooker to life more violently” aptly explains how the genesis of this most ambitious body of work was seeded by an inspirational touchstone of resounding familiarity. The archetype Bacon appropriated as starting point for his Pope series was Diego Velázquez’s extraordinary Portrait of Pope Innocent X of 1650, held in the Galleria Doria Pamphilj, Rome; a painting for which Bacon was “haunted and obsessed by the image…its perfection.” (Francis Bacon interviewed by Hugh Davies, June 26, 1973, in Hugh Davies and Sally Yard, Francis Bacon, New York, 1986, p. 23) Having travelled to Rome from the Spanish court of Philip IV in 1649, Velázquez was afforded the great honor of depicting the Pope, Giambattista Pamphilj, known as Innocent X, whom he had met as papal nuncio in Madrid in 1626-30. The painting was executed in a Jubilee year when 700,000 pilgrims descended on Rome, and Velázquez dutifully portrayed the Bishop of Rome as the most powerful man in the world, encased by the trappings of his office. Yet the spectacular achievement of this portrait is that within the gold, silk and lace vestiges of papal supremacy resides a mortal human being beset by flaw and fallibility. While Pope Innocent X resides literally ex cathedra in the papal throne, official document clutched in hand and glinting ring proffered for all to pay homage; the man Pamphilj wears a pained and suspicious countenance that betrays the unscrupulous and duplicitous pitfalls of his tenure as Pontiff. The brilliance of Velázquez’s embedded juxtaposition, pitting the Papacy’s supposed omnipotence against Man’s inevitable frailty, while also delivering a likeness that was so highly received that he was awarded a golden medallion for his services, ignited an ambition within Bacon to equal this achievement, albeit in a godless world that had been literally torn to shreds by chaos and destruction. Moreover, beyond the substrate of canvas and layers of oil paint, Bacon perceived the voice of the artist speaking across the centuries: “If you look at a Velázquez, what do you think about? ... I don’t think about his sitters, I think about him… I think about Velázquez, I think people believe that they’re painting other people, but they paint out their own instincts.” (Francis Bacon interviewed by Hugh Davies, August 13, 1973, in Exh. Cat., Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, Francis Bacon: The Papal Portraits of 1953, 1999, p. 34) 

It has previously been noted that Bacon had not at this stage in his career seen the Velázquez painting in Rome firsthand, and for this initial series of papal portraits he worked from a black and white illustration of the work. This in turn has been suggested as the cause for the purple color of the garments in these paintings differing from the original cardinal red. However, while Bacon’s extensive enlistment of and reference to photographic sources is beyond question, it also seems more than likely that he was familiar with another version of Velázquez’s painting; one that has resided in Apsley House, the seat of the Duke of Wellington in London, since the beginning of the Nineteenth Century. 

This smaller painting by Veláquez, either a study made before or copy made after the larger work, was gifted to the Duke of Wellington by the King of Spain in 1816, together with over 150 other pictures from the Spanish Royal Collection, in recognition of his defeat of Napoleonic forces and liberation of Spain in the Peninsular War. The British commander had recovered these works from the fleeing carriage of Joseph Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon, after the Battle of Vitoria in 1813. Under the Duke of Wellington’s great-grandson, Apsley House and its art collection was opened to the public in 1952, the centenary of the first Duke’s death and, conveniently, shortly before Francis Bacon initiated a grand cycle of papal portraits including the present painting. That Apsley House sits at Hyde Park Corner, about fifteen minutes’ walk from the Royal College of Art where Bacon was using a studio between 1951 and 1953, readily invites the hypothesis that he was able to study this highly accomplished version at close quarters.

However, the Velázquez painting is merely a template that becomes a delivery system for Bacon’s radical and unrelenting reinvention. Indeed, the present work is Bacon’s concrete realization that “Great art is always a way of concentrating, reinventing what is called fact, what we know of our existence….tearing away the veils that fact acquires through time.” (Hugh Davies and Sally Yard, Op. Cit., p. 110) Thus Bacon replaces the subjective idiosyncrasies of the grand state portrait with an intimate visage of pain and suffering that stands as proxy for the torment of the human race. His source for this all-encompassing cipher was provided by a film still of a screaming female character in Sergei Eisenstein’s 1925 movie The Battleship Potemkin. Bacon had first seen the movie in 1935 and viewed it frequently thereafter, and this specific still was reproduced in Roger Manvell’s 1944 paperback Film, though Bacon also kept other reproductions of the startling image. The frame shows a pince-nez wearing elderly woman, commonly referred to as a nurse, shot through the eye and caught at the instant of death. It belongs to the movie’s massacre sequence on the Odessa Steps which, though it veers wildly from historical accuracy, remains one of the most iconic pieces of propagandist film ever made. Within its remorseless tragedy it is this character, part blinded and dying while also witnessing a baby in a pram being brutalized by the sword of a tsarist soldier, that embodies the conception of absolute horror and the abandonment of all hope. By supplanting Velázquez’s portrait of Innocent X with this twentieth-century essence of ultimate despair and its tortured last gasping breath, Bacon unites two extremes of enduringly vehement imagery.

It is also important to note the personal biographical import of this vision to its author. Since a small child, Bacon had suffered chronic asthma, greatly aggravated by the dogs and horses that had attended his upbringing. According to Caroline Blackwood, “When he was a little boy his parents had put him astride a pony and they had forced him to go fox-hunting. He loathed the brutality of the “Sport of Kings” and developed a violent allergy to horses. He turned blue once he found himself on the hunting field and he started to choke with chronic asthma…The subject made him freeze. He became agitated whenever I broached it. He started to tug at the collar of his shirt as if he were trying to loosen some kind of noose which he found asphyxiating; for a moment he resembled the agonized figures in his paintings whose faces turn a truly dangerous shade of indigo purple as they go into the last stages of strangulation.” (Caroline Blackwood, ‘Francis Bacon Obituary’, The New York Review of Books, 24th September 1992) Bacon’s papal figure is caught in a symphony of movement; its representation comprised all of shadows and flashing motion and evolving in constant flux. This also recalls the photography of Edweard Muybridge, which used multiple cameras and an elaborate trigger device to capture successive stages of motion. Bacon possessed many illustrations of Muybridge's images and this Pope’s right hand, veering towards us out of the darkness, recalls something of Muybridge's photograph series 'Striking a Blow with the Right Hand', a fragment of which was found in the artist's studio after his death. While the right hand of Velázquez’s Innocent X hangs limply from the support of his gilded throne, Bacon’s papal fury lashes out at the viewer with a clenched fist, once again destabilizing the barrier between viewer and subject.

The drama of all this corporeal expression is greatly intensified by the artist’s complex framing of the composition and the many facets that define an uneasy sense of flux and unknowable dimensions within the canvas. Bacon’soverlapping linear schema here act as cage-like space frames that enclose this Pope inside its solitary nightmare. Indeed, the present work proves to act as prototype for Bacon’s consequent declaration: “I like the anonymous compartment, like a room concentrated in a small space. I would like to paint landscapes in a box…If you could enclose their infinity in a box they would have a greater concentration.” (the artist interviewed by Hugh M. Davies in 1973, in Martin Harrison, ed., Francis Bacon: New Studies, Göttingen, 2009, p. 111) This compositional organization echoes Picasso’s strategy of reducing three-dimensions to a scored network of diagrammatic black lines, such as in the groundbreaking Painter and Model of 1928. It is also strongly redolent of the frantic inscribed urgency of Giacometti’s autograph portraiture style and architectonic construction, so harshly graphic in his visceral drawings, and evident in Portrait of Peter Watson of 1953, which, as noted by Martin Harrison, was a work that Bacon probably knew given his close relationship to the sitter. It is also reminiscent of Bacon’s work as a furniture designer in the late 1920s, where he defined the parameters of actual space with folding screens and curved metal tubes inspired by the Bauhaus, Le Corbusier and Ozenfant, and which are well-evidenced in a 1930 article in The Studio magazine and the documentary paintings of his fellow painter and friend Roy de Maistre. The space frames of the papal portraits mark the mature inception of these translucent compartments of literal, psychological and somatic space that would subsequently trap anonymous businessmen within midnight blue voids and imprison countless actors in triptychs throughout Bacon’s oeuvres of the subsequent three decades.

The drama of all this corporeal expression is greatly intensified by the artist’s complex framing of the composition and the many facets that define an uneasy sense of flux and unknowable dimensions within the canvas. Bacon’soverlapping linear schema here act as cage-like space frames that enclose this Pope inside its solitary nightmare. Indeed, the present work proves to act as prototype for Bacon’s consequent declaration: “I like the anonymous compartment, like a room concentrated in a small space. I would like to paint landscapes in a box…If you could enclose their infinity in a box they would have a greater concentration.” (the artist interviewed by Hugh M. Davies in 1973, in Martin Harrison, ed., Francis Bacon: New Studies, Göttingen, 2009, p. 111) This compositional organization echoes Picasso’s strategy of reducing three-dimensions to a scored network of diagrammatic black lines, such as in the groundbreaking Painter and Model of 1928. It is also strongly redolent of the frantic inscribed urgency of Giacometti’s autograph portraiture style and architectonic construction, so harshly graphic in his visceral drawings, and evident in Portrait of Peter Watson of 1953, which, as noted by Martin Harrison, was a work that Bacon probably knew given his close relationship to the sitter. It is also reminiscent of Bacon’s work as a furniture designer in the late 1920s, where he defined the parameters of actual space with folding screens and curved metal tubes inspired by the Bauhaus, Le Corbusier and Ozenfant, and which are well-evidenced in a 1930 article in The Studio magazine and the documentary paintings of his fellow painter and friend Roy de Maistre. The space frames of the papal portraits mark the mature inception of these translucent compartments of literal, psychological and somatic space that would subsequently trap anonymous businessmen within midnight blue voids and imprison countless actors in triptychs throughout Bacon’s oeuvres of the subsequent three decades.

Perhaps more than any other theme associated with his canon, the threat of mortality inhabits every pore of Bacon’s art. Danger, violence and death constantly linger in the recesses of his canvases, acting like a continual incantation of his deft maxim: “Consciousness of mortality sharpens one’s sense of existing.” (Ibid., p. 96). Of course, many of his greatest later works became directly associated with the sudden and brutal deaths of his respective lovers Peter Lacy and George Dyer, but in fact the risk of impending fatality imbued his existence from its most formative stage. Raised by English parents living in Ireland’s County Kildare during the violent era surrounding the Easter Uprising, Bacon’s upbringing was intensely fraught and immersed in the threat of harm: “My father warned us that at any time, not that we would be shot, but at night someone might break in or whatever. My grandmother married three times, at that time her husband was the Head of Police in Kildare and in their house all the windows were sandbagged. I lived with my grandmother a lot. I grew up in an atmosphere of threat for a long time…And then I was in Berlin at the beginning of the Nazi thing, my whole life had been lived through a time of stress.” (Ibid., pp. 104-5) Aged no more than sixteen, in 1926 he was abruptly driven from his home, away from hearth and kin by his father, and embarked for London. At the beginning of 1927 he was in Berlin and by the Spring he had arrived in Paris, staying that summer with a family in Chantilly before moving in the Fall to the Hôtel Delambre in Montparnasse, where he endured an impoverished subsistence lifestyle for almost a year. Alongside the actual events of his life, he of course became a voracious devourer of the canon of western Art History, and he purposely sought out those most powerful narrators of the tragedy of the human drama, from Michelangelo to Velázquez to Poussin to Picasso, to provide an analytical framework for his own experience. The dramatic shadow of this illustrious precedent is readily evident in the present work, and perhaps none more so than a work that Bacon would have encountered in the Tate, Henry Fuseli’s Lady Macbeth Seizing the Daggers, which in execution, subject and spirit stands as an eerily prescient predecessor for Untitled (Pope).

Bacon’s coming of age was thus forged in a crucible of uncertainty and risk, and this heritage violently coursed through his subsequent life and art. Fifteen years after Paris, in 1944, he delivered the searing cry of his masterpiece Three Studies for Figures at the Base of a Crucifixion; shrieking into existence to announce that figurative art could never be the same again. A decade after that, the Popes declared that everything we thought we knew - the history that was meant to bind us, the psychological and emotional journeys we supposedly shared, the promise of futures entwined together - were all merely veils to mask the thunderous yet silent solitary scream that lies within us all. It remains one of the most pertinent, universal and affecting visions in the History of Art, and the full force of its power is trapped forever on the surface of this sensational painting.

Sotheby's. Contemporary Art Evening Auction. New York | 13 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com

Baiser de paix représentant la Vierge à l'Enfant, Limoges, début du XVIe siècle, Atelier de Jean I Pénicaud ( vers 1480 -1541)

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Baiser de paix représentant la Vierge à l'Enfant, Limoges, début du XVIe siècle, Atelier de Jean I Pénicaud ( vers 1480 -1541) - Photo Sotheby's

émail polychrome peint sur cuivre; dans un cadre en bronze doré. Haut. 16 cm. Estimation: 5,000 - 7,000 EUR. Unsold

RÉFÉRENCE BIBLIOGRAPHIQUE: P. Verdier, Catalogue of the Painted Enamels of the Renaissance, cat. Walters Art Gallery, Baltimore, 1967, p. 42-43, n° 24.

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: Cette Vierge à l'Enfant en émail peint est tout à fait caracteristique des oeuvres des premiers émailleurs de la fin du XVe/début du XVIe siècle à Limoges. On peut y constater l'influence du Maître du triptyque d'Orléans, ainsi que celle du Maître aux Grands Fronts caractérisé par ses personnages aux fronts hauts dégarnis, aux petits visages et yeux bridés, que l'on retrouve ensuite dans l'oeuvre des Pénicaud.

Sotheby's. Important Mobilier, Sculptures et Objets d'Art. Paris | 09 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com 


Volet de diptyque. Allemagne, Meuse ou Rhénanie, milieu du XIVe siècle

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Volet de diptyque. Allemagne, Meuse ou Rhénanie, milieu du XIVe siècle - Photo Sotheby's

Ivoire sculpté en relief; 11 x 7.2 x 0.8 cm. Estimation: 6,000 - 8,000 EUR - Lot. Vendu 7,500 EUR

RÉFÉRENCE BIBLIOGRAPHIQUE: D. Gaborit-Chopin (éd.), Ivoires médiévaux Ve-XVe siècle, cat. musée du Louvre, Paris, 2003, no. 187, p. 434.

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: Cette belle plaque de Crucifixion est tout à fait comparable aux ivoires allemands de la Meuse ou Rhénanie, datant de la première moitié du XIVe siècle. L'attitude des Saints Apôtres à droite peut être comparée à une Crucifixion en ivoire de la Meuse, provenant de l'ancienne collection Corroyer (musée du Louvre, inv. no. OA 7760) ou un autre ivoire de la région de la Meuse, conservé au musée provincial des Arts anciens à Namur (inv. no. 253). 

Sotheby's. Important Mobilier, Sculptures et Objets d'Art. Paris | 09 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com 

Grain de chapelet en forme de tête de Janus. France ou Allemagne, XVIe ou XVIIe siècle

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Grain de chapelet en forme de tête de Janus. France ou Allemagne, XVIe ou XVIIe siècle - Photo Sotheby's

tête à deux faces en ivoire. Haut. 6.1 cm. Estimation: 4,000 - 6,000 EUR - Lot. Vendu 4,375 EUR

REFERENCES BIBLIOGRAPHIQUES: G. Laue (ed.), Memento Mori, cat.exp. Kunstkammer Georg Laue, Munich, nos. 13, 27, 28, pp. 64-5, 78-9, 158-9
Ph. Malgouyres, Ivoires de la Renaissance et des Temps modernes, cat. Musée du Louvre, Paris, 2010, no. 123, p. 180

Sotheby's. Important Mobilier, Sculptures et Objets d'Art. Paris | 09 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com

Grain de chapelet en forme de Tête de Janus. France ou Allemagne, XVI ou XVIIe siècle - Sotheby's

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Grain de chapelet en forme de Tête de Janus. France ou Allemagne, XVI ou XVIIe siècle - Photo Sotheby's

tête à trois faces en ivoire. Haut. 4.5 cm. Estimation: 3,000 - 5,000 EUR. Lot. Vendu 4,000 EUR

REFERENCE BIBLIOGRAPHIQUE: G. Laue (ed.), Memento Mori, cat.exp. Kunstkammer Georg Laue, Munich, nos. 13, 27, 28, pp. 64-5, 78-9, 158-9

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: Cet ivoire est très proche d'une tête à trois faces en ivoire au Metropolitan Museum, New York (inv. no. 17.190.306).

Sotheby's. Important Mobilier, Sculptures et Objets d'Art. Paris | 09 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com

Commode en vernis parisien d'époque Louis XV, vers 1760-1770

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Commode en vernis parisien d'époque Louis XV, vers 1760-1770 - Photo Sotheby's

à décor de temples et personnages imitant le laque, la façade à ressaut ouvrant à deux tiroirs ; ornementation de bronze verni : entrées de serrure, anneaux de tirage, chutes d'angle, tablier et pieds en griffe ; dessus de marbre rouge de Rance (restauré) ; (les sabots rapportés). Haut. 93 cm, larg. 131,5 cm, prof. 57,5 cm. Estimation: 5,000 - 7,000 EUR. Lot. Vendu 21,150 EUR

Sotheby's. Important Mobilier, Sculptures et Objets d'Art. Paris | 09 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com

Important diamond bracelet, 1930s

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Important  diamond bracelet, 1930s - Photo Sotheby's

The centre of bombé design, set with a pear-shaped diamond weighing 8.82 carats within a surround of circular-cut stones, the bracelet set with cushion-shaped, circular, single-cut and baguette diamonds, length approximately 174mm, signed Cartier, Paris and numbered, French assay and maker's marks. Estimate: 281,000 - 465,000 CHF - Lot sold. 674,500 CHF

Accompanied by GIA report no. 1142785117, stating that the diamond is D Colour, VS1 Clarity.

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels. Geneva | 14 Nov 2012 www.sothebys.com

Paire de grands fauteuils à dossier plat en hêtre naturel sculpté d'époque Régence

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Paire de grands fauteuils à dossier plat en hêtre naturel sculpté d'époque Régence - Photo Sotheby's

le haut du dossier de forme mouvementée, les supports d'accotoir en coup de fouet ; sculptés de coquilles et feuilles d'acanthe sur fond de croisillons ; garnis à carreau et recouverts d'étoffe bleue. Quantité: 2. Haut. 100 cm. Estimation: 10,000 - 15,000 EUR - Lot. Vendu 19,950 EUR

Sotheby's. Important Mobilier, Sculptures et Objets d'Art. Paris | 09 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com

Ruby and diamond bracelet, Van Cleef & Arpels, Circa 1940

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Ruby and diamond bracelet, Van Cleef & Arpels, Circa 1940 - Photo Sotheby's

Set with oval and circular-cut rubies, highlighted with arches set with baguette and circular-cut diamonds, length approximately 180mm, signed Van Cleef & Arpels and numbered, French assay marks. Estimate: 280,000 - 465,000 CHF - Lot sold. 662,500 CHF

Accompanied by SSEF report no. 65236, stating that the sixty-nine rubies are of Burmese origin, with no indications of heating.

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels. Geneva | 14 Nov 2012 www.sothebys.com


Commode en placage de bois noirci et bronze verni d'époque Louis XIV, attribuée à François Lieutaud

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Commode en placage de bois noirci et bronze verni d'époque Louis XIV, attribuée à François Lieutaud - Photo Sotheby's

la façade bombée ouvrant à quatre tiroirs sur trois rangs ; ornementation de bronze verni : poignées, entrées de serrure et plinthe à décor de masques ; dessus de marbre Campan grand mélange ; (accidents et manques). Haut. 81 cm, long. 132 cm, prof. 84 cm. Estimation: 15,000 - 20,000 EUR - Lot. Vendu 19,950 EUR

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: Grand-père du célèbre horloger Balthazar Lieutaud, François Lieutaud est né vers 1665 à Marseille dans une famille de sculpteurs. Il fut reçu maître ébéniste vers 1710 et il eut un fils Charles Lieutaud qui vint s’installer au cloître Saint Jean-de-Latran à Paris où il fut vite rejoint par son père. François connut André-Charles Boulle qu’il cite comme expert personnel lors d’un procès vers 1719. Comme ce dernier, il fondait lui-même ses ornements de bronze doré.

Sotheby's. Important Mobilier, Sculptures et Objets d'Art. Paris | 09 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com

Diamond necklace, Graff

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Diamond necklace, Graff - Photo Sotheby's

Designed as a graduated line of oval diamonds ranging from 1.01 to 3.12 carats, signed Graff, length approximately 410mm, pouch stamped Graff. Estimate: 200,000 - 300,000 CHF - Lot sold. 566,500 CHF

Accompanied by twenty-two GIA reports, stating that the diamonds range from D to F Colour, IF to VS2 Clarity.

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels. Geneva | 14 Nov 2012 www.sothebys.com

Chaise en bois sculpté et redoré d'époque Louis XV, vers 1770, attribuée à Louis Delanois

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Chaise en bois sculpté et redoré d'époque Louis XV, vers 1770, attribuée à Louis Delanois - Photo Sotheby's

le dossier de forme médaillon sculpté de feuilles s'enroulant autour d'une baguette et d'une frise de perles et culots, soutenu par des montants à décor de feuilles et graines ; l'assise sculptée d'une frise de perles et culots, d'une guirlande de feuilles de chêne et d'un ruban tournant, reposant sur des pieds à cannelures rudentées à asperges ; (non garnie). Haut. 89 cm, larg. 44 cm. stimation: 15,000 - 25,000 EUR - Lot. Vendu 18,750 EUR

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: Bien que non estampillée, cette chaise présente toutes les caractéristiques de l'oeuvre de Louis Delanois aux alentours de 1770. La sculpture d'une exceptionnelle qualité, à feuilles de chêne et glands, semble indiquer un commanditaire masculin, mais nous n'excluons pas une commande de Madame Du Barry pour les appartements de Louis XV à Louveciennes. En outre, on remarque des chaises d'un dessin similaire sur la célèbre gouache de J.M. Moreau le Jeune (musée du Louvre) figurant le souper donné en l'honneur du roi par la favorite, toujours à Louveciennes, le 2 septembre 1771.

Sotheby's. Important Mobilier, Sculptures et Objets d'Art. Paris | 09 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com

Fine emerald and diamond necklace, 1970s

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Fine emerald and diamond necklace, 1970s - Photo Sotheby's

Designed as a line of channel-set baguette diamonds, suspending a garland composed of a series of graduated step-cut emeralds, interspersed with scrolls of baguette, marquise- and brilliant-cut diamonds, length approximately 380mm, the detachable emerald garland may be worn as a bracelet, length approximately 180mm. Estimate: 95,000 - 140,000 CHF - Lot sold. 470,500 CHF

Sotheby's. Magnificent Jewels. Geneva | 14 Nov 2012 www.sothebys.com

Beau Crucifix en corail et nacre. Sicile, Trapani, fin XVIIe-début XVIIIe siècle

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Beau Crucifix en corail et nacre. Sicile, Trapani, fin XVIIe-début XVIIIe siècle - Photo Sotheby's

e Christ en nacre, apposé sur une croix en cuivre doré et gravé au pointillé, les bras de la croix ornés d'une bordure de filigrane en nacre, ses extrémités pourvu de fleurons en corail et nacre, le pied hexagonal richement décoré de feuillages en nacre et fleurs en corail; inscrit: INRI; corail et nacre, sur une croix en cuivre gravé. Haut. 48 cm. Estimation: 18,000 - 25,000 EUR. Unsold

RÉFÉRENCES BIBLIOGRAPHIQUES: M. Concetta Di Natale (ed.), Il corallo Trapanese nei secoli XVI e XVII, cat. exp. Brixiantiquaria, Brescia, 2002, nos.29, 34, pp. 80-1, 90-1; S. Rizzo (ed.), Il tesoro dell' isola. Capolavori siciliani in argento e corallo dal XV al XVIII secolo , cat. exp. Praga, 2004, pp.724-56; Mostra dei Coralli al museo Pepoli di Trapani, cat. exp. museo Pepoli,Trapani, 1986, no. 105, p. 271

NOTE DE CATALOGUE: The present crucifix is a particularly fine example of the elaborate coral objects produced in the north Sicilian port-city of Trapani during the Baroque period. The combination of coral with mother of pearl and gilt copper is used to similar effect in an ornamental plaque dating to the early 18th century in a Milanese private collection (Di Natale, op. cit. no. 34, pp. 90-1). Note the similarly conceived fanciful foliate forms carved from Coral and Mother of Pearl. The overall form of the crucifix, with incised decoration on the body of the cross itself, compares closely with another crucifix dating to the second half of the 17th century in the Trionfante collection in Palermo (Di Natale, op. cit. no. 29, pp. 80-1). In this example, white enamel is used instead of Mother of Pearl for the border of the crucifix, further underscoring the intention of the makers to create sumptuous objects using virtuoso techniques and rare materials.

Trapani was the pre-eminent centre for the production of works of art in coral from the 17th through to the 18th centuries. Due to its geographical position and rich natural resources, including extensive coral banks, Trapani became one of the principal commercial ports in the Mediterranean. This growth resulted in the expansion of a prosperous merchant class, who, together with the wealthy clergy, contributed to the development of a high level of coral and goldsmith's work. The demand for coral objects is indicated by the establishment of a guild of coral workers, the Arte dei Corallari, in the town in 1628. Coral was considered to be a very precious and rare commodity in the 16th century, principally due to its rarity and because of the burgeoning interest in the Natural Sciences throughout Europe. The material was esteemed both for its colour, texture and supposed apotropaic qualities, making it particularly suitable for devotional objects, such as the present crucifix.

Sotheby's. Important Mobilier, Sculptures et Objets d'Art. Paris | 09 nov. 2012 www.sothebys.com

 

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