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Auction archive: Lot number 9

Albert Oehlen

Estimate
£700,000 - £900,000
ca. US$914,566 - US$1,175,871
Price realised:
n. a.
Auction archive: Lot number 9

Albert Oehlen

Estimate
£700,000 - £900,000
ca. US$914,566 - US$1,175,871
Price realised:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

Albert Oehlen Follow La Playa Nueva signed and dated 'A. Oehlen '02' on the reverse acrylic and oil on canvas 199.5 x 199.5 cm (78 1/2 x 78 1/2 in.) Painted in 2002.
Provenance Galerie Nathalie Obadia, France Private Collection Private Collection (acquired from the above in 2003) Sotheby's, New York, 13 November 2012, lot 69 Private Collection Sotheby's, London, 17 October 2014, lot 5 Private Collection, South Africa Private Collection, Los Angeles Exhibited Paris, Galerie Nathalie Obadia, Galerie Nathalie Obadia celebrates its tenth anniversary , 20 September - 10 November 2003 Catalogue Essay Executed in 2002, Albert Oehlen’s La Playa Nueva is a monumental tour-de-force of chromatic complexity. The delicate rivulets of paint counter thick brushstrokes within this painting, testifying to Oehlen’s life-long fascination with the matìere of painting. At the same time they demonstrate the cachet of excess and idiosyncrasy that has characterised his distinct and prescient oeuvre. Taking the artistic legacy of such artists as Willem de Kooning and Joan Mitchell into compellingly unconventional pastures, La Playa Nueva perfects the studied nonchalance of Oehlen’s earlier paintings. Whilst seemingly announcing itself with the tempo of impromptu gestural brushstrokes, the electrifying composition is in fact the achievement of a deliberate and methodological working method. Each drip, smudge and stroke that would otherwise be the product of improvisation is carefully painted, just as the anarchic composition is intentionally constructed to teeter at the edge of total dissolution. La Playa Nueva is an eloquent testament to Oehlen’s more recent embrace of the chromatic possibilities in painting: ‘I had always used colour - but not with my heart, my eye, or my aesthetic judgment. I just didn’t care about colour, and I was happy not to think about it. For about 20 years, I just put my paint on the palette and worked with what was there. Then came the moment when I thought, What would happen if I did care about colour?’ (Albert Oehlen quoted in Sean O’Hagan, ‘Albert Oehlen: The Change Artist’, W Magazine , 15 May 2015, online). Seen in tandem with other works created in the early 2000s, such as the seminal Selbstporträt mit Offenem Mund , 2001, La Playa Nueva points to Oehlen’s simultaneous pursuit of abstract and figurative painting. As Oehlen has notably explained in this regard,‘The question “abstract or not abstract”…is irrelevant to me. I have a whole series of forerunners in this opinion, for example Georg Baselitz who turned the motif upside-down – a magnificent gesture, considered and courageous … Upside-down, the subject is still recognizable, but it doesn’t make sense, because it’s standing on its head’ (Albert Oehlen quoted in ‘The Rules of the Game’, Artforum , November 1994). With La Playa Nueva, Oehlen appears to be pursuing a similar strategy of turning the motif on its end. The orange silhouette of a human figure at the bottom of the canvas hints at a landscape scene having been turned 90 degrees to the right. Viewed from this perspective, a beach scene begins to reveal itself – the quasi-abstract shape in the upper left begins to read as a tropical flower, while the linearity of the rivulets of blue paint indicates the horizon of an ocean. The painting’s title, which literally translates as ‘new beach’ but could also refer to an eponymous resort in the Dominican Republic, summons a tropical scene of languor that in many ways recalls Sigmar Polke’s Dschungel , 1967. By rotating the painting and complicating straightforward readings through an explosive cacophony of form and colour, Oehlen characteristically complicates any claims of representation. As such, La Playa Nueva powerfully underlines curator Martin Clark’s acute observation that, ‘Oehlen has painted himself into a position where none of his canvases can be described as either abstract or figurative … Oehlen’s sampledelic, synthesized practice extends painting’s vocabulary – its expressive, emotional range – whether intentionally or not. But it is his attitude – Punk’s lasting legacy – that ensures his work remains so restles

Auction archive: Lot number 9
Auction:
Datum:
6 Oct 2017
Auction house:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

Albert Oehlen Follow La Playa Nueva signed and dated 'A. Oehlen '02' on the reverse acrylic and oil on canvas 199.5 x 199.5 cm (78 1/2 x 78 1/2 in.) Painted in 2002.
Provenance Galerie Nathalie Obadia, France Private Collection Private Collection (acquired from the above in 2003) Sotheby's, New York, 13 November 2012, lot 69 Private Collection Sotheby's, London, 17 October 2014, lot 5 Private Collection, South Africa Private Collection, Los Angeles Exhibited Paris, Galerie Nathalie Obadia, Galerie Nathalie Obadia celebrates its tenth anniversary , 20 September - 10 November 2003 Catalogue Essay Executed in 2002, Albert Oehlen’s La Playa Nueva is a monumental tour-de-force of chromatic complexity. The delicate rivulets of paint counter thick brushstrokes within this painting, testifying to Oehlen’s life-long fascination with the matìere of painting. At the same time they demonstrate the cachet of excess and idiosyncrasy that has characterised his distinct and prescient oeuvre. Taking the artistic legacy of such artists as Willem de Kooning and Joan Mitchell into compellingly unconventional pastures, La Playa Nueva perfects the studied nonchalance of Oehlen’s earlier paintings. Whilst seemingly announcing itself with the tempo of impromptu gestural brushstrokes, the electrifying composition is in fact the achievement of a deliberate and methodological working method. Each drip, smudge and stroke that would otherwise be the product of improvisation is carefully painted, just as the anarchic composition is intentionally constructed to teeter at the edge of total dissolution. La Playa Nueva is an eloquent testament to Oehlen’s more recent embrace of the chromatic possibilities in painting: ‘I had always used colour - but not with my heart, my eye, or my aesthetic judgment. I just didn’t care about colour, and I was happy not to think about it. For about 20 years, I just put my paint on the palette and worked with what was there. Then came the moment when I thought, What would happen if I did care about colour?’ (Albert Oehlen quoted in Sean O’Hagan, ‘Albert Oehlen: The Change Artist’, W Magazine , 15 May 2015, online). Seen in tandem with other works created in the early 2000s, such as the seminal Selbstporträt mit Offenem Mund , 2001, La Playa Nueva points to Oehlen’s simultaneous pursuit of abstract and figurative painting. As Oehlen has notably explained in this regard,‘The question “abstract or not abstract”…is irrelevant to me. I have a whole series of forerunners in this opinion, for example Georg Baselitz who turned the motif upside-down – a magnificent gesture, considered and courageous … Upside-down, the subject is still recognizable, but it doesn’t make sense, because it’s standing on its head’ (Albert Oehlen quoted in ‘The Rules of the Game’, Artforum , November 1994). With La Playa Nueva, Oehlen appears to be pursuing a similar strategy of turning the motif on its end. The orange silhouette of a human figure at the bottom of the canvas hints at a landscape scene having been turned 90 degrees to the right. Viewed from this perspective, a beach scene begins to reveal itself – the quasi-abstract shape in the upper left begins to read as a tropical flower, while the linearity of the rivulets of blue paint indicates the horizon of an ocean. The painting’s title, which literally translates as ‘new beach’ but could also refer to an eponymous resort in the Dominican Republic, summons a tropical scene of languor that in many ways recalls Sigmar Polke’s Dschungel , 1967. By rotating the painting and complicating straightforward readings through an explosive cacophony of form and colour, Oehlen characteristically complicates any claims of representation. As such, La Playa Nueva powerfully underlines curator Martin Clark’s acute observation that, ‘Oehlen has painted himself into a position where none of his canvases can be described as either abstract or figurative … Oehlen’s sampledelic, synthesized practice extends painting’s vocabulary – its expressive, emotional range – whether intentionally or not. But it is his attitude – Punk’s lasting legacy – that ensures his work remains so restles

Auction archive: Lot number 9
Auction:
Datum:
6 Oct 2017
Auction house:
Phillips
London
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