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Auction archive: Lot number 16

Roy Lichtenstein

Estimate
US$1,500,000 - US$2,500,000
Price realised:
US$1,538,500
Auction archive: Lot number 16

Roy Lichtenstein

Estimate
US$1,500,000 - US$2,500,000
Price realised:
US$1,538,500
Beschreibung:

16 Roy Lichtenstein Forms in Space 1985 Magna on canvas 24 x 32 in. (61 x 81.3 cm) Signed and dated “R. Lichtenstein ‘85” on the reverse.
Provenance Leo Castelli Gallery, New York Exhibited The Hague, Netherlands, Art in Embassies Program “An Exhibition of American Art” Ambassador’s Residence, October 2002 Catalogue Essay In America the biggest is the best. ROY LICHTENSTEIN (Roy Lichtenstein BBC Interview by David Sylvester New York, January 1966) Perhaps no artist of the Twentieth Century has employed such an instantly recognizable visual language as Roy Lichtenstein His signature palette of bold primary colors set against neutral blocks of black, white and gray creates stunningly dynamic canvases from which his signature dots and bold lines emerge. He is as well known for this very technique as he is for the subjects he paints— interior scenes, portraits of consumer products, filmic scenes transformed from the pages of comic books, and, as in the case of the present lot, emblems of American culture. His approach to painting is both unique in its style and symbolic of the times in its use of appropriation. Lichtenstein’s imagery thrusts forth the objects in a bold and striking super-reality; culling inspiration from the everyday imagery of Americana, his work has sustained it’s prominence as one of the most radical and unique visions of the Post-War period. Like many artists of the late Twentieth Century, Lichtenstein used his compositions as a way to address the rampant consumerism and commercialization of the time. By choosing an omnipresent image—the American flag—and reimagining it with a new color scheme, bold lines and sharp contrast, he imbues his work with a deep pathos of contemporary American culture. He accentuates the banality of a recognizable symbol, and fully explores the artifice of perspective and the limits of flatness. Instead of white stars against a blue background, magnified red dots take their place, and we find thick and bold diagonal black lines as a substitute for the vertical alternating red and white stripes. Forms in Space, 1985 hints at a comic-book inspired narrative of the symbol of Americana. Lichtenstein’s interpretation of the American flag, a symbol which he had rendered previously in its true colors, is not just mechanized through enlarged dots and slanted lines, but evokes something of the actual mechanics of perception. Lichtenstein investigates the ways in which the eyes perceive color, distance, shape and form, by abstracting an image that is burned in our memories in one particular and unerring way. Lichtenstein’s configuration of lines, dots, and colors forces us to read the American symbol as a new image, challenging our reflexes and intuition. Replacing the stars with simple circles, Lichtenstein comments on consumerism’s contribution to American culture: the stars are now dulled into mundane representations of their former glory. In addition, the angled relationship of Lichtenstein’s stripes to their referent signals a nation in straits with tenets of its original values. The present lot also reflects the political and social atmosphere in the decade of its creation. Forms in Space, 1985 replaces red and white stripes with black and white, negating the original vitality of the American flag with something sanitized, conjuring visions of America steeped in the fascist conclusion of its Red paranoia. The individuality of each of the stars has been blunted into submission, each no longer a shape of unique expression, but a dot among others of unremarkable equality. The present lot, Forms in Space, 1985, though highly saturated in its connotations of a dystopian America, is the quintessential embodiment of Lichtenstein’s brilliant refashionings of icons. In and of itself, it is a symbol of two freedoms: artistic and individualistic. Read More

Auction archive: Lot number 16
Auction:
Datum:
7 Nov 2011
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

16 Roy Lichtenstein Forms in Space 1985 Magna on canvas 24 x 32 in. (61 x 81.3 cm) Signed and dated “R. Lichtenstein ‘85” on the reverse.
Provenance Leo Castelli Gallery, New York Exhibited The Hague, Netherlands, Art in Embassies Program “An Exhibition of American Art” Ambassador’s Residence, October 2002 Catalogue Essay In America the biggest is the best. ROY LICHTENSTEIN (Roy Lichtenstein BBC Interview by David Sylvester New York, January 1966) Perhaps no artist of the Twentieth Century has employed such an instantly recognizable visual language as Roy Lichtenstein His signature palette of bold primary colors set against neutral blocks of black, white and gray creates stunningly dynamic canvases from which his signature dots and bold lines emerge. He is as well known for this very technique as he is for the subjects he paints— interior scenes, portraits of consumer products, filmic scenes transformed from the pages of comic books, and, as in the case of the present lot, emblems of American culture. His approach to painting is both unique in its style and symbolic of the times in its use of appropriation. Lichtenstein’s imagery thrusts forth the objects in a bold and striking super-reality; culling inspiration from the everyday imagery of Americana, his work has sustained it’s prominence as one of the most radical and unique visions of the Post-War period. Like many artists of the late Twentieth Century, Lichtenstein used his compositions as a way to address the rampant consumerism and commercialization of the time. By choosing an omnipresent image—the American flag—and reimagining it with a new color scheme, bold lines and sharp contrast, he imbues his work with a deep pathos of contemporary American culture. He accentuates the banality of a recognizable symbol, and fully explores the artifice of perspective and the limits of flatness. Instead of white stars against a blue background, magnified red dots take their place, and we find thick and bold diagonal black lines as a substitute for the vertical alternating red and white stripes. Forms in Space, 1985 hints at a comic-book inspired narrative of the symbol of Americana. Lichtenstein’s interpretation of the American flag, a symbol which he had rendered previously in its true colors, is not just mechanized through enlarged dots and slanted lines, but evokes something of the actual mechanics of perception. Lichtenstein investigates the ways in which the eyes perceive color, distance, shape and form, by abstracting an image that is burned in our memories in one particular and unerring way. Lichtenstein’s configuration of lines, dots, and colors forces us to read the American symbol as a new image, challenging our reflexes and intuition. Replacing the stars with simple circles, Lichtenstein comments on consumerism’s contribution to American culture: the stars are now dulled into mundane representations of their former glory. In addition, the angled relationship of Lichtenstein’s stripes to their referent signals a nation in straits with tenets of its original values. The present lot also reflects the political and social atmosphere in the decade of its creation. Forms in Space, 1985 replaces red and white stripes with black and white, negating the original vitality of the American flag with something sanitized, conjuring visions of America steeped in the fascist conclusion of its Red paranoia. The individuality of each of the stars has been blunted into submission, each no longer a shape of unique expression, but a dot among others of unremarkable equality. The present lot, Forms in Space, 1985, though highly saturated in its connotations of a dystopian America, is the quintessential embodiment of Lichtenstein’s brilliant refashionings of icons. In and of itself, it is a symbol of two freedoms: artistic and individualistic. Read More

Auction archive: Lot number 16
Auction:
Datum:
7 Nov 2011
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
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