Showing posts with label Willem de Kooning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Willem de Kooning. Show all posts

23/10/22

Inaugural Exhibition at Phillips Los Angeles - Featured Jean-Michel Basquiat, Ernie Barnes, Amy Sherald, Julie Mehretu, Tom Wesselman, Willem de Kooning, Claude Lalanne...

Inaugural Exhibition at Phillips Los Angeles
25 – 27 October 2022

Phillips Los Angeles
Phillips Los Angeles, 9041 Nemo Street, West Hollywood
Credit: Eric Staudenmaier
Courtesy of Phillips 

Phillips announces details surrounding the opening of its new Los Angeles outpost, the launch of which underscores the company’s commitment to the West Coast amid its continued global expansion. Open to the public from 25-27 October, the exhibition will feature works from the upcoming auctions of 20th Century & Contemporary Art, Watches, and Design, including Jean-Michel Basquiat’s To Repel Ghosts, estimated at $7-10 million. Also on view will be two works by Ernie Barnes from the collection of Golden Globe-Nominated actor Richard Roundtree, in addition to paintings by Amy Sherald and Julie Mehretu. Timepieces on view in Los Angeles include watches by Rolex, Patek Philippe, and Audemars Piguet, and Claude Lalanne’s Pair of “crococurule” stools from the December Design auction will also be featured in the exhibition.

Jean-Michel Basquiat
Jean-Michel Basquiat
To Repel Ghosts, 1985
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: $7,000,000 - 10,000,000

Jean-Michel Basquiat’s To Repel Ghosts is among the highlights of the exhibition and will be a star lot in the November Evening Sale of 20th Century & Contemporary Art. The monumental work, measuring seven feet tall, is a nearly double-life-sized portrait of Basquiat’s friend and fellow artist Jack Walls. Well known in 1980s downtown circles as Robert Mapplethorpe’s muse and romantic partner, Walls is rendered in Jean Michel Basquiat’s distinctive visual idiom—unmistakable by the gestural swathes of black, white, and yellow pigment—against a surface of affixed wooden boards. Jean-Michel Basquiat’s penchant for incorporating doors and other found media into his practice first led him to experiment with timber slats for his 1984 masterwork Flexible, which employed the fencing that surrounded his Los Angeles studio. Exceedingly pleased with the resulting aesthetic effect, Jean-Michel Basquiat soon returned to the idiosyncratic material, which he purchased from a Soho lumber yard to comprise the support of more than 17 paintings in the mid 1980s. Epitomizing his guiding principle to—quite literally—bring the urban environment into his studio, this major work from 1985 nods to Jean-Michel Basquiat’s past as a street artist while anticipating the hallmarks of his mature style. The work belongs to a series of portraits Jean-Michel Basquiat undertook in 1985 of Black subjects in the downtown art scene. The work’s title, To Repel Ghosts, is one of Jean-Michel Basquiat’s most iconic phrases which has become synonymous with the artist’s declaration of his own identity.  

Ernie Barnes
Ernie Barnes
Untitled (Basketball Players), circa late 1970s-early 1980s
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: $300,000 - 400,000

Ernie Barnes
Ernie Barnes
My Man, circa 1980
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: $150,000 - 200,000

Phillips also presents two works by Ernie Barnes, owned by Golden Globe-nominated actor Richard Roundtree, an icon of American cinema, most notable for his role as SHAFT. Despite being neighbors in 1970s Los Angeles, Roundtree discovered Barnes’ artistic endeavors after Sammy Davis Jr. and Charlton Heston purchased his artworks. When Roundtree learned that Ernie Barnes lived just four blocks away, he walked to his home and met with him. As an actor who desired to explore Black experiences on screen, it was important for Rountree to see these artworks. They visually captured life, people, and places he had experienced. The hues used in both works are reflective of primary colors often found in Black American films during the 1970s. Deep browns, yellows, tans and hints of “blue-black,” were cultural markers that signified the wide range of skin color and complexion found in Black America. Evidenced in both Untitled (Basketball Players) and My Man, Ernie Barnes’ unique ability to elevate the everyday to the extraordinary have captivated collectors across the world, with the market for his work having reached new heights

Amy Sherald
Amy Sherald
Pilgrimage of the Chameleon, 2016
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: $1,800,000 - 2,500,000

Phillips continues to lead the market for Amy Sherald, holding the world record and all top four prices at auction. We are thrilled to be offering Amy Sherald’s Pilgrimage of the Chameleon, 2016, this fall. At 72 x 51 inches, the work is notably larger than her standard 54 x 43 inch format, making this a rare opportunity to acquire a large-scale masterpiece by the artist.

Julie Mehretu
Julie Mehretu
Tsunemasa (next to Kaija), 2014
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: $4,000,000 - 6,000,000

Julie Mehretu’s Tsunemasa (next to Kaija) will also be on view in Los Angeles. Inspired by the popular Japanese Noh drama Tsunemasa, the work evokes the mystical realm of the ceremony in the theatrical narrative as well as the Noh tradition of a tree as a background. Her use of sumi ink echoes these ancient traditions, with the medium used in East Asian calligraphy and meant to recall the essential nature of mark-making. A superb example from one of Julie Mehretu's most acclaimed bodies of work, Tsunemasa (next to Kaija) coalesces her signature layered approach with a softer, more gestural idiom that evokes both cave drawings and urban graffiti. An enlarged reproduction of the work was used as the set for Peter Sellars’ staging of Kaija Saariaho’s opera Only the Sound Remains, which was performed across Europe and Canada beginning in 2016.

Tom Wesselmann
Tom Wesselmann
Mouth #14 (Marilyn), 1967
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: $3,500,000 - 4,500,000

Coming to auction for the first time since its creation, Tom Wesselmann’s Mouth #14 (Marilyn) is an iconic iteration of the artist’s series of Mouth paintings. Executed in November 1967, a watershed year for the artist, the work is among the early pivotal works in the series that were conceived in tandem with Wesselmann’s first Smoker paintings. Immersing the viewer into a hypnotic erotism and graphic intensity that characterizes the best of Tom Wesselmann’s works, here the mouth of Marilyn Monroe is transformed into a pair of sultry scarlet lips, her blonde strands of hair evoking sensual flames. Immediately recalling Andy Warhol’s Marilyn Monroe’s Lips, 1962, the present work is at once an homage to Marilyn’s iconic smile and an embodiment of the relationship between advertising and celebrity. Exhibited at Sidney Janis Gallery the year of its creation, Mouth #14 (Marilyn) marks the apex of Tom Wesselmann’s mid-career painterly investigations that established him at the forefront of the Pop art vanguard.

Audemars Piguet
Audemars Piguet
Reference 26585CE, Royal Oak Perpetual Calendar Openworked
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: $150,000 - 300,000

Also included in the opening exhibition are highlights from The New York Watch Auction: SEVEN and Design, with both auctions being held in December 2022 in New York.

Designed by Formation Association, Phillips Los Angeles marks the first brick and mortar space on the West Coast for the auction house, alongside an extensive network of specialists in the region, with representatives having long been in place in Seattle and San Francisco. 

Phillips Los Angeles will look to engage the vibrant collecting community on the West Coast through a robust calendar of events. A new partnership with the design influencer website Sight Unseen will activate the space from the launch of the gallery onward, with works by locally based contemporary designers on view alongside the auction highlights of 20th Century & Contemporary Art and Watches. Further details of the partnership are forthcoming.

Other hightlights include Willem de Kooning's painting Untitled (Lady in Red), circa 1977; Yayoi Kusama's painting Nets Blue, 1960; Helen Frankenthaler's painting Saturday Night, 1985; Claude Lalanne's Pair of "Crococurule" stools, designed 1992, produced 2009 and 2012; Amoako Boafo's painting White on White, 2019, among others.

Willem de Kooning
Willem de Kooning
Untitled (Lady in Red), circa 1977
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: $4,000,000 - 6,000,000

Yayoi Kusama
Yayoi Kusama
Nets Blue, 1960
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: $2,500,000 - 3,500,000

Helen Frankenthaler
Helen Frankenthaler
Saturday Night, 1985
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: $800,000 - 1,200,000

Claude Lalanne
Claude Lalanne
Pair of "Crococurule" stools, designed 1992, produced 2009 and 2012
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate Upon Request

Amoako Boafo
Amoako Boafo
White on White, 2019
Courtesy of Phillips
Estimate: $100,000 - 150,000

Estimates do not include buyer’s premium; prices achieved include the hammer price plus buyer’s premium.

PHILLIPS LOS ANGELES
9041 Nemo Street, West Hollywood, Los Angeles

18/11/21

Chaïm Soutine / Willem de Kooning @ Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris - La peinture incarnée

Chaïm Soutine / Willem de Kooning, 
la peinture incarnée
Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris
Jusqu'au 10 janvier 2022

Le musée de l’Orangerie présente une exposition faisant dialoguer les œuvres de Chaïm Soutine (1893–1943), peintre de l’École de Paris d’origine russe (actuelle Biélorussie) et de Willem de Kooning (1904–1997), expressionniste abstrait américain d’origine néerlandaise. Cette exposition s’attache plus spécifiquement à explorer l’impact de la peinture de Soutine sur la vision picturale du grand peintre américain.

Soutine a en effet marqué la génération des peintres d’après-guerre par la force expressive de sa peinture et sa figure d’“artiste maudit”, aux prises avec les vicissitudes et les excès de la bohême parisienne.

Son œuvre a été particulièrement visible aux États-Unis entre les années 1930 et 1950, moment où l’artiste figuratif de tradition européenne est relu à l’aune des théories artistiques nouvelles. La peinture gestuelle et l’empâtement prononcé des toiles de Soutine conduisent critiques et commissaires d’exposition à le proclamer “prophète”, héraut de l’expressionnisme abstrait américain. C’est précisément au tournant des années 1950 que Willem de Kooning entame le chantier pictural des Woman, toiles dans lesquelles se construit un expressionnisme singulier, entre figuration et abstraction. L’élaboration de ce nouveau langage correspond au moment où le peintre convoque l’univers artistique de Chaïm Soutine et s’y confronte. De Kooning découvre les tableaux de son prédécesseur dès les années 1930, puis à la rétrospective qui consacre le peintre au Museum of Modern Art à New York en 1950. Il sera particulièrement marqué ensuite par la présentation des toiles de Soutine dans les collections de la Fondation Barnes de Philadelphie, où il se rend avec sa femme Elaine en juin 1952.

Mieux que tout autre artiste de sa génération, de Kooning a su déceler la tension entre les deux pôles apparemment opposés de l’œuvre de Soutine : une recherche de structure doublée d’un rapport passionné à l’histoire de l’art, et une tendance prononcée à l’informel. L’œuvre de Soutine devient alors une référence permanente pour l’artiste américain. De Kooning, qui cherche à dégager sa peinture de l’antagonisme art figuratif / art abstrait en élaborant une « troisième voie » originale, trouve dans l’art de Soutine une légitimation de sa propre pratique.

L’exposition met en dialogue les univers singuliers de ces deux artistes au travers d’une cinquantaine d’œuvres articulées autour de thématiques essentielles : la tension entre la figure et l’informe, la peinture de la « chair », la pratique picturale « gestuelle » des deux artistes. Ces moments thématiques sont ponctués de remises en perspective historiques, par l’évocation de la rétrospective de Soutine au MoMA en 1950 et de la visite de de Kooning à la Fondation Barnes en 1952. 

Cette proposition, la première sur ce sujet, s’inscrit dans la ligne de programmation d’expositions temporaires que porte le musée de l’Orangerie autour de sa collection, notamment autour de celle de Paul Guillaume à la suite d’Apollinaire. Le regard du poète (2016), de Dada Africa, sources et influences extra-occidentales (2017), de Giorgio de Chirico. La peinture métaphysique (2020) et rejoint la question de la réception américaine, faisant suite à Nymphéas. L’abstraction américaine et le dernier Monet (2018).

Commissariat :
Claire Bernardi, conservatrice au musée d’Orsay
Simonetta Fraquelli, commissaire, Fondation Barnes, Philadelphie

L’exposition est organisée avec la Fondation Barnes, Philadelphie où elle a été présentée du 7 mars au 8 août 2021. Elle bénéficie du soutien de la Fondation de Kooning, New York.

Chaïm Soutine / Willem de Kooning
Chaïm Soutine / Willem de Kooning. La peinture incarnée
Catalogue de l'exposition
Couverture du catalogue / epmo
Format 230 pages, 24,8 × 31 cm, environ 84 illustrations
Français + textes traduits en anglais en fin d’ouvrage
Coédition Musées d’Orsay et de l’Orangerie / Hazan 

Musée de l’Orangerie
Jardin des Tuileries, Place de la Concorde, 75001 Paris

21/01/07

Willem de Kooning and Chloe Piene, Locks Gallery, Philadelphia - Bodies of Desire: Works on Paper

Willem de Kooning and Chloe Piene
Bodies of Desire: Works on Paper
Locks Gallery, Philadelphia
January 16 – February 24, 2007

Bodies of Desire: Works on Paper by Willem de Kooning and Chloe Piene is curated by Klaus Ottmann and combines a selection of Willem de Kooning's works on paper depicting women with Chloe Piene's autoerotic charcoal drawings.

In the mid-1950s, WILLEM DE KOONING surprised the artists and critics of his time by single-handedly resurrecting the female form, which had been largely abandoned by his peers. Between 1950-54 he created a series of paintings and works on paper on the theme of the Woman, which by some were compared to goddesses and by others, to whores. The women in these works were naked, either depicted singly or in pairs, usually standing or seated and facing the viewer, presented unashamedly sexual, with grossly enlarged mouths, eyes, breasts, and vaginas. Willem de Kooning said later about these works: "Certain artists and critics attacked me for painting the Women, but I felt that this was their problem, not mine... I have to follow my desires."

In 1966 de Willem de Kooning executed a second series of Women drawings, this time with his eyes closed. In these works, the women are less confrontational and more seductive, but just as brazenly sexual. What may have made these works so scandalous at the time was that, despite their stereotypical depiction, Willem de Kooning's Women seem less like (sex) objects and more like subjects that embody not simply the artist's desire but a desire of their own. They recall the famous dictum by the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan that desire is always the desire of the Other.

The young, Brooklyn-based artist CHLOE PIENE has been making diaphanous charcoal drawings of naked figures on paper and vellum based mostly on photographs of herself and, occasionally, other people since the late 1990s. The frenzied yet controlled energy of the lines in her drawings is evidence of their performative character. They are executed rapidly, or in Chloe Piene’s words, “it comes out in one shot.” Chloe Piene’s agitated style of drawing is a strangely alluring complement to her unsettling imagery, which often imbues its autoeroticism with Vanitas-type morbidity. Chloe Piene sees her work as riding the line “between the erotic and the forensic." Unlike Willem de Kooning’s drawings, which relocate the Self in the Other, Chloe Piene’s inscribe the Other in the Self. Her drawings are of her own body. Their delicate rawness and nakedness exude a wide array of emotions ranging from anguish to ecstasy. Unlike Willem de Kooning’s, the sexuality in Chloe Piene’s drawings is less explicit. Anatomical details are veiled by the energy of her lines, while the erotic is being shifted from specific body parts to the lines themselves.

Chloe Piene is only one in a new generation of both male and female artists (Cecily Brown, Sue Williams, Kiki Smith, Matthew Barney, Jonathan Meese, to name but a few) whose works redefine art in terms of the body and take a closer look at the nature or shape of sexuality and gender.

The exhibition is curated by Klaus Ottmann, an independent curator and scholar based in New York. Klaus Ottmann most recently curated the Sixth International SITE Santa Fe Biennial (on view until January 7, 2007) and has been appointed as the curator for the 2007 Open ev+a exhibition in Limerick, Ireland. 

Bodies of Desire continues the Locks Gallery’s Curator’s Choice exhibitions. Previous curators include Barry Schwabsky, Richard Torchia, and David Cohen. An illustrated brochure with an essay by Ottmann accompanies the show.

LOCKS GALLERY
600 Washington Square South, Philadelphia, PA 19106