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Auction archive: Lot number 6

Christopher Wool

Estimate
£500,000 - £700,000
ca. US$651,427 - US$911,998
Price realised:
£585,000
ca. US$762,170
Auction archive: Lot number 6

Christopher Wool

Estimate
£500,000 - £700,000
ca. US$651,427 - US$911,998
Price realised:
£585,000
ca. US$762,170
Beschreibung:

◆ 6 Christopher Wool Follow Untitled (D139) blind stamped with the artist's name 'WOOL' lower right; further signed, titled and dated '"D139" WOOL 2001' on the reverse enamel on rice paper 167.6 x 121.9 cm (65 7/8 x 47 7/8 in.) Executed in 2001.
Provenance Luhring Augustine, New York Private Collection, Europe Inigo Philbrick, London Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited London, Inigo Philbrick, Christopher Wool / Mike Kelley Paintings on Paper , 8 February - 28 April 2016, pp. 35, 40-41, 43 (illustrated, pp. 41, 43) Catalogue Essay Soaked with pink enamel, Untitled (D139) is as structured as it is explosive. The painting’s ambivalent composition, at once square and convulsive, is reminiscent of Neville Wakefield’s description of a Beckettian mise-en-abyme; the colourful block located at its centre and gesturing towards the canvas’s right border indeed feels like ‘a painting within a painting’ from which the untouched white contours are as though shunned, essentially redundant. As part of Christopher Wool’s 9th Street Run Down series comprised of forty-four works on paper, Untitled (D139) is a coherent addition to the artist’s already rich body of work, vested with formal reduction, textual absurdity and self-contained deprecation. Best known for his painterly take on downtown New York’s 1970s urban scene – the city’s ‘countercultural bastion’ – Christopher Wool started transferring words, scribbles and colour from walls onto canvases in the early 1980s, after completing art studies at Sarah Lawrence College and the Studio School in New York (Katherine Brimson, ‘Trouble is My Business’, Christopher Wool , exh. cat., Guggenheim, 2013, p. 36). Developed over the course of three decades, Wool’s work has consistently been exploring the vivaciousness and lifelike quality of paint, retaining an attachment to its traditional medium while simultaneously bending the latter’s representational conventions. Eluding the return of figuration and circumventing the advent of multimedia, Wool delved ever-more into the visual language of graffiti, benefitting from the fluid automatism of silkscreen production which resulted in neatly contracted painterly surfaces. On Wool's particularly idiosyncratic style, Neville Wakefield further mused: ‘Dispense with hierarchy, dispense with composition and colour, dispense with pictorial order, they seem to say. Yet, paradoxically, from this confrontation with painting’s supposed civility, Wool makes an elegant and formidable case for it being alive and well’ (Neville Wakefield, ‘Christopher Wool: Paintings Marked by Confrontation and Restraint’, Elle Décor , March 1999, p. 59). Untitled (D139) merges such dialectical notions, pairing visible impulse with smooth strokes, spontaneity with formal skill, rawness with civility. The painting’s minimal appearance is emblematic of Wool’s progression from the textual to the visual; it represents further reduction into abstraction. The use of exuberant colour is a rare iteration; writer Katherine Brinson specifies that ‘bright hues would only occasionally punctuate the artist’s typically puritan palette’ (Katherine Brinson, ‘Trouble is My Business’, Christopher Wool , exh. cat., Guggenheim, 2013, p. 44). As such, Untitled (D139) is at once paradigmatic and atypical: a singularly joyous expression of Wool’s ‘simple and irrefutable logic’ (Neville Wakefield, ‘Christopher Wool: Paintings Marked by Confrontation and Restraint’, Elle Décor, March 1999, pp. 58-60). The radiant washes in Untitled (D139) appear to fuse with the sheet, denying any three-dimensional illusionism and evoking the tireless, gestural experimentations of Helen Frankenthaler Employing her soak-stain technique, where she poured thinned oil paint directly onto the sheet, in the present work Wool’s investigations into the gestural qualities of pigment and the haloing of layered paint, conjure the tonal compositions of his Abstract Expressionist forbearer. The artist’s early word paintings, composed of large black stenciled letters on white aluminium sheets, focused already on the concept of reduction, as their constitutive terms were deprived of vowels, or their traditional spelling was altogether supplanted by street slang

Auction archive: Lot number 6
Auction:
Datum:
5 Oct 2018
Auction house:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

◆ 6 Christopher Wool Follow Untitled (D139) blind stamped with the artist's name 'WOOL' lower right; further signed, titled and dated '"D139" WOOL 2001' on the reverse enamel on rice paper 167.6 x 121.9 cm (65 7/8 x 47 7/8 in.) Executed in 2001.
Provenance Luhring Augustine, New York Private Collection, Europe Inigo Philbrick, London Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited London, Inigo Philbrick, Christopher Wool / Mike Kelley Paintings on Paper , 8 February - 28 April 2016, pp. 35, 40-41, 43 (illustrated, pp. 41, 43) Catalogue Essay Soaked with pink enamel, Untitled (D139) is as structured as it is explosive. The painting’s ambivalent composition, at once square and convulsive, is reminiscent of Neville Wakefield’s description of a Beckettian mise-en-abyme; the colourful block located at its centre and gesturing towards the canvas’s right border indeed feels like ‘a painting within a painting’ from which the untouched white contours are as though shunned, essentially redundant. As part of Christopher Wool’s 9th Street Run Down series comprised of forty-four works on paper, Untitled (D139) is a coherent addition to the artist’s already rich body of work, vested with formal reduction, textual absurdity and self-contained deprecation. Best known for his painterly take on downtown New York’s 1970s urban scene – the city’s ‘countercultural bastion’ – Christopher Wool started transferring words, scribbles and colour from walls onto canvases in the early 1980s, after completing art studies at Sarah Lawrence College and the Studio School in New York (Katherine Brimson, ‘Trouble is My Business’, Christopher Wool , exh. cat., Guggenheim, 2013, p. 36). Developed over the course of three decades, Wool’s work has consistently been exploring the vivaciousness and lifelike quality of paint, retaining an attachment to its traditional medium while simultaneously bending the latter’s representational conventions. Eluding the return of figuration and circumventing the advent of multimedia, Wool delved ever-more into the visual language of graffiti, benefitting from the fluid automatism of silkscreen production which resulted in neatly contracted painterly surfaces. On Wool's particularly idiosyncratic style, Neville Wakefield further mused: ‘Dispense with hierarchy, dispense with composition and colour, dispense with pictorial order, they seem to say. Yet, paradoxically, from this confrontation with painting’s supposed civility, Wool makes an elegant and formidable case for it being alive and well’ (Neville Wakefield, ‘Christopher Wool: Paintings Marked by Confrontation and Restraint’, Elle Décor , March 1999, p. 59). Untitled (D139) merges such dialectical notions, pairing visible impulse with smooth strokes, spontaneity with formal skill, rawness with civility. The painting’s minimal appearance is emblematic of Wool’s progression from the textual to the visual; it represents further reduction into abstraction. The use of exuberant colour is a rare iteration; writer Katherine Brinson specifies that ‘bright hues would only occasionally punctuate the artist’s typically puritan palette’ (Katherine Brinson, ‘Trouble is My Business’, Christopher Wool , exh. cat., Guggenheim, 2013, p. 44). As such, Untitled (D139) is at once paradigmatic and atypical: a singularly joyous expression of Wool’s ‘simple and irrefutable logic’ (Neville Wakefield, ‘Christopher Wool: Paintings Marked by Confrontation and Restraint’, Elle Décor, March 1999, pp. 58-60). The radiant washes in Untitled (D139) appear to fuse with the sheet, denying any three-dimensional illusionism and evoking the tireless, gestural experimentations of Helen Frankenthaler Employing her soak-stain technique, where she poured thinned oil paint directly onto the sheet, in the present work Wool’s investigations into the gestural qualities of pigment and the haloing of layered paint, conjure the tonal compositions of his Abstract Expressionist forbearer. The artist’s early word paintings, composed of large black stenciled letters on white aluminium sheets, focused already on the concept of reduction, as their constitutive terms were deprived of vowels, or their traditional spelling was altogether supplanted by street slang

Auction archive: Lot number 6
Auction:
Datum:
5 Oct 2018
Auction house:
Phillips
London
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