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Auction archive: Lot number 12

Mark Bradford

Estimate
£1,800,000 - £2,500,000
ca. US$2,300,661 - US$3,195,362
Price realised:
£2,277,000
ca. US$2,910,336
Auction archive: Lot number 12

Mark Bradford

Estimate
£1,800,000 - £2,500,000
ca. US$2,300,661 - US$3,195,362
Price realised:
£2,277,000
ca. US$2,910,336
Beschreibung:

◆ 12 Mark Bradford Follow Drag Her to the Path signed with the artist's initial, titled and dated 'M "Drag Her to the Path" 2011' on the reverse mixed media collage on canvas 183.2 x 244.3 cm (72 1/8 x 96 1/8 in.) Executed in 2011.
Provenance Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York Private Collection, Hong Kong Video Mark Bradford 'Drag Her to the Path', 2011 Presented through the artist’s characteristic and methodical stripped down medley of media, paint, paper, newsprint and carbon paper, Drag Her to the Path is a seminal work by Mark Bradford addressing the artist’s concern with American Civil Rights. Catalogue Essay Presented through the artist’s characteristic and methodical stripped down medley of media, paint, paper, newsprint and carbon paper, Drag Her to the Path is a seminal work by Mark Bradford addressing the artist’s concern with American Civil Rights. Cascading across the pictorial field the dense, symbolic landscape of ridges and undulations is a monumental example of how Bradford’s additive and subtractive technique confronts crucial historical and social subjects. The artist’s preoccupation with issues of racial discrimination, urban poverty and social injustice is masterfully introduced through his choice of emotive title. Instilling yet more drama into the composition, the explicit statement ‘Drag her to the path’ injects the surface of the work with a narrative structure. Weaving these issues into his conceptual framework the artist transforms the work from a mere aesthetic masterpiece into a provocative statement in keeping with Bradford’s assertion that all painting is subversively figurative, even abstract painting. Profoundly nostalgic, Drag Her to the Path , is filled with Bradford’s distinctive character, confronting the viewer with a visually rich composition and a web of visual semantics. Typically topographic, terrestrial and gritty, Bradford’s paintings have been understood to address, result from, and even to some extent depict, the immediate urban conditions of the artist’s studio in Leimert Park, Los Angeles, where the artist continues to live and work. Like Ellsworth Kelly who for over sixty years has drawn inspiration for his compositions from shapes extracted from the world, Bradford is profoundly influenced by his local neighbourhood. His paintings are thus linked to the particularities of lived experience in the urban environment. The Los Angeles writer Ernest Hardy describes the paintings as reportage in being close to the streets and accessible to all: ‘There are no velvet ropes in Mark Bradford’s art’ (Ernest Hardy, 'Border Crossings,' in Mark Bradford Merchant Posters , New York, 2010, p. 7). A photograph of Lake View Terrace from 1991 by American artist Lewis Baltz depicts the largely white Los Angeles suburb which exists in close proximity to Bradford’s studio. What at first appears to be an unremarkable image similarly draws meaning from its title, 11777 Foothill Boulevard, Los Angeles, California . The sun beats down on a dry grid of streets and sidewalks that not only constructs a neighbourhood but also attempts to organise and constrain social tensions. A portrait of an absence, the image records with almost forensic blandness, the site of Rodney King’s brutal beating by LAPD officers in March 1991. With his classically distanced eye for the violent potential beneath the suburban sprawl, Baltz captured a scene both charged with an absence of the trauma that, a year later, would cause a city to implode. It is a complex portrait of a body in crisis – King’s beaten body, the fractured social body, and the anguished civic body – and of the radical and economic tensions that cyclically and epidemically plague the American urban landscape. Near to this very site, Leimert Park and the Crenshaw district became a poignant centre of African American history in Los Angeles after the Watts riots of 1965 and the area retains that status today. In the aftermath of the 1992 riots, Leimert Park was, in Bradford’s words, ‘scorched earth.’ These were the second riots in South Los Angeles in less than thirty years. The time span marked a disturbing regression, a chronic reversal that plays out in urban situations across the count

Auction archive: Lot number 12
Auction:
Datum:
29 Jun 2017
Auction house:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

◆ 12 Mark Bradford Follow Drag Her to the Path signed with the artist's initial, titled and dated 'M "Drag Her to the Path" 2011' on the reverse mixed media collage on canvas 183.2 x 244.3 cm (72 1/8 x 96 1/8 in.) Executed in 2011.
Provenance Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York Private Collection, Hong Kong Video Mark Bradford 'Drag Her to the Path', 2011 Presented through the artist’s characteristic and methodical stripped down medley of media, paint, paper, newsprint and carbon paper, Drag Her to the Path is a seminal work by Mark Bradford addressing the artist’s concern with American Civil Rights. Catalogue Essay Presented through the artist’s characteristic and methodical stripped down medley of media, paint, paper, newsprint and carbon paper, Drag Her to the Path is a seminal work by Mark Bradford addressing the artist’s concern with American Civil Rights. Cascading across the pictorial field the dense, symbolic landscape of ridges and undulations is a monumental example of how Bradford’s additive and subtractive technique confronts crucial historical and social subjects. The artist’s preoccupation with issues of racial discrimination, urban poverty and social injustice is masterfully introduced through his choice of emotive title. Instilling yet more drama into the composition, the explicit statement ‘Drag her to the path’ injects the surface of the work with a narrative structure. Weaving these issues into his conceptual framework the artist transforms the work from a mere aesthetic masterpiece into a provocative statement in keeping with Bradford’s assertion that all painting is subversively figurative, even abstract painting. Profoundly nostalgic, Drag Her to the Path , is filled with Bradford’s distinctive character, confronting the viewer with a visually rich composition and a web of visual semantics. Typically topographic, terrestrial and gritty, Bradford’s paintings have been understood to address, result from, and even to some extent depict, the immediate urban conditions of the artist’s studio in Leimert Park, Los Angeles, where the artist continues to live and work. Like Ellsworth Kelly who for over sixty years has drawn inspiration for his compositions from shapes extracted from the world, Bradford is profoundly influenced by his local neighbourhood. His paintings are thus linked to the particularities of lived experience in the urban environment. The Los Angeles writer Ernest Hardy describes the paintings as reportage in being close to the streets and accessible to all: ‘There are no velvet ropes in Mark Bradford’s art’ (Ernest Hardy, 'Border Crossings,' in Mark Bradford Merchant Posters , New York, 2010, p. 7). A photograph of Lake View Terrace from 1991 by American artist Lewis Baltz depicts the largely white Los Angeles suburb which exists in close proximity to Bradford’s studio. What at first appears to be an unremarkable image similarly draws meaning from its title, 11777 Foothill Boulevard, Los Angeles, California . The sun beats down on a dry grid of streets and sidewalks that not only constructs a neighbourhood but also attempts to organise and constrain social tensions. A portrait of an absence, the image records with almost forensic blandness, the site of Rodney King’s brutal beating by LAPD officers in March 1991. With his classically distanced eye for the violent potential beneath the suburban sprawl, Baltz captured a scene both charged with an absence of the trauma that, a year later, would cause a city to implode. It is a complex portrait of a body in crisis – King’s beaten body, the fractured social body, and the anguished civic body – and of the radical and economic tensions that cyclically and epidemically plague the American urban landscape. Near to this very site, Leimert Park and the Crenshaw district became a poignant centre of African American history in Los Angeles after the Watts riots of 1965 and the area retains that status today. In the aftermath of the 1992 riots, Leimert Park was, in Bradford’s words, ‘scorched earth.’ These were the second riots in South Los Angeles in less than thirty years. The time span marked a disturbing regression, a chronic reversal that plays out in urban situations across the count

Auction archive: Lot number 12
Auction:
Datum:
29 Jun 2017
Auction house:
Phillips
London
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