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Auction archive: Lot number 19

Anselm Kiefer

Estimate
£600,000 - £800,000
ca. US$919,671 - US$1,226,228
Price realised:
£662,500
ca. US$1,015,470
Auction archive: Lot number 19

Anselm Kiefer

Estimate
£600,000 - £800,000
ca. US$919,671 - US$1,226,228
Price realised:
£662,500
ca. US$1,015,470
Beschreibung:

Anselm Kiefer Die Argonauten 2008 oil, emulsion, acrylic, shellac, branches, lead, gold paint, charcoal, fabric, ashes, sand, metal, ceramic, ceramic teeth, plaster on canvas, in artist's glass and steel frame 282 × 192 × 35 cm (111 × 75 5/8 × 13 3/4 in). Titled ‘Die Argonauten’ upper left.
Provenance Private Collection, Europe Catalogue Essay 'To my mind, art is the only possibility of making a connection between disparate things and thus creating a meaning... I see history as synchronous, whether it's the Sumerians with their Epic of Gilgamesh or German mythology. As far as I am concerned the old sagas are not old at all, nor is the Bible. When you go to them, most things are already formulated.' - ANSELM KIEFER 1989 Anselm Kiefer employs a bewildering panoply of materials in his paintings, creating works which are as varied in their thematic direction as they are in their composition and creation. His vast range of subject matter is matched only by the seemingly limitless number of materials he manipulates to create his impressive pieces. The distinctive use of multiple mediums in a single painting blurs the line between painting and sculpture, while questioning our own ability to negotiate the physical realm in a coherent fashion and to unify a sense of time within space. The present lot is an intimate and poignant example of Kiefer's ability to comment on both historical and religious events in an original and insightful fashion. Anselm Kiefer was born into a country overshadowed by guilt and underscored by suppressed memory. It was also a nation that had lost its identity and entire artistic and cultural heritage. The artistic world of post-Nazi Germany imposed upon itself the ‘unspoken law’ of having to break with the old, pre-war traditions, as well as censoring all iconography and imagery relating to the Third Reich. This had a catastrophic effect upon the arts and ‘plunged Federal Germany into a veritable crisis of representation.’ (A. Lauterwein, Anselm Kiefer / Paul Celan, Myth, Mourning and Memory, London: Thames & Hudson, 2007, p. 24). It was in this environment, and while under the influence of Joseph Beuys that Kiefer began to question his own artistic heritage by focusing on the iconographic, symbolic and mythological elements of German culture which had been poisoned by Nazi propaganda, then silenced and buried in the nation’s collective unconscious. This search for identity as expressed by a personal and national heritage is the driving force behind Kiefer’s work. He is drawn to German myths, literature, and music as well as to philosophy and alchemy. Romanticism and its landscape painters, such as Caspar David Friedrich are also part of Kiefer’s inheritance. Friedrich and other artists of his era regarded nature as a mirror of the human soul and as an agent with which to depict and express human emotions. Over time, Kiefer expanded his quest for identity beyond Germany and began to draw upon the Old Testament and the myths of ancient Greece and Egypt. Such a dialogue with history and mythology transforms Kiefer’s works into an infinite web of meaning, symbols and imagery. The results are monumental, heavily textured paintings layered with materials such as sand, ash, lead, branches and water which confuse the distinction between painting and sculpture. These ‘constructions’ have often been left outside to weather them and make them appear as if remnants of a time long past. The present lot, entitled Die Argonauten [The Argonauts], draws on the ancient Greek legend of sailors led by Jason, who set out on their ship the Argo to regain the Fleece of the Golden Ram from Colchis in order to reclaim the throne from King Pelias. Once in Colchis, King Aietes agreed to return the fleece upon completion of several tasks. Amongst other onerous feats Jason had to tame fire-breathing bulls, plough and sow a field with dragons’ teeth, and overcome the warriors that are born from these teeth. Die Argonauten is an ambitious three-dimensional work made with a characteristic combination of unlikely materials, such as branches, lead, gold paint fabric, ashes, sand, ceramic teeth, and plaster. Although the dress, the gold, and the teeth, together with the handwritten title, explicitly refer to the Greek myth

Auction archive: Lot number 19
Auction:
Datum:
12 Feb 2015
Auction house:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

Anselm Kiefer Die Argonauten 2008 oil, emulsion, acrylic, shellac, branches, lead, gold paint, charcoal, fabric, ashes, sand, metal, ceramic, ceramic teeth, plaster on canvas, in artist's glass and steel frame 282 × 192 × 35 cm (111 × 75 5/8 × 13 3/4 in). Titled ‘Die Argonauten’ upper left.
Provenance Private Collection, Europe Catalogue Essay 'To my mind, art is the only possibility of making a connection between disparate things and thus creating a meaning... I see history as synchronous, whether it's the Sumerians with their Epic of Gilgamesh or German mythology. As far as I am concerned the old sagas are not old at all, nor is the Bible. When you go to them, most things are already formulated.' - ANSELM KIEFER 1989 Anselm Kiefer employs a bewildering panoply of materials in his paintings, creating works which are as varied in their thematic direction as they are in their composition and creation. His vast range of subject matter is matched only by the seemingly limitless number of materials he manipulates to create his impressive pieces. The distinctive use of multiple mediums in a single painting blurs the line between painting and sculpture, while questioning our own ability to negotiate the physical realm in a coherent fashion and to unify a sense of time within space. The present lot is an intimate and poignant example of Kiefer's ability to comment on both historical and religious events in an original and insightful fashion. Anselm Kiefer was born into a country overshadowed by guilt and underscored by suppressed memory. It was also a nation that had lost its identity and entire artistic and cultural heritage. The artistic world of post-Nazi Germany imposed upon itself the ‘unspoken law’ of having to break with the old, pre-war traditions, as well as censoring all iconography and imagery relating to the Third Reich. This had a catastrophic effect upon the arts and ‘plunged Federal Germany into a veritable crisis of representation.’ (A. Lauterwein, Anselm Kiefer / Paul Celan, Myth, Mourning and Memory, London: Thames & Hudson, 2007, p. 24). It was in this environment, and while under the influence of Joseph Beuys that Kiefer began to question his own artistic heritage by focusing on the iconographic, symbolic and mythological elements of German culture which had been poisoned by Nazi propaganda, then silenced and buried in the nation’s collective unconscious. This search for identity as expressed by a personal and national heritage is the driving force behind Kiefer’s work. He is drawn to German myths, literature, and music as well as to philosophy and alchemy. Romanticism and its landscape painters, such as Caspar David Friedrich are also part of Kiefer’s inheritance. Friedrich and other artists of his era regarded nature as a mirror of the human soul and as an agent with which to depict and express human emotions. Over time, Kiefer expanded his quest for identity beyond Germany and began to draw upon the Old Testament and the myths of ancient Greece and Egypt. Such a dialogue with history and mythology transforms Kiefer’s works into an infinite web of meaning, symbols and imagery. The results are monumental, heavily textured paintings layered with materials such as sand, ash, lead, branches and water which confuse the distinction between painting and sculpture. These ‘constructions’ have often been left outside to weather them and make them appear as if remnants of a time long past. The present lot, entitled Die Argonauten [The Argonauts], draws on the ancient Greek legend of sailors led by Jason, who set out on their ship the Argo to regain the Fleece of the Golden Ram from Colchis in order to reclaim the throne from King Pelias. Once in Colchis, King Aietes agreed to return the fleece upon completion of several tasks. Amongst other onerous feats Jason had to tame fire-breathing bulls, plough and sow a field with dragons’ teeth, and overcome the warriors that are born from these teeth. Die Argonauten is an ambitious three-dimensional work made with a characteristic combination of unlikely materials, such as branches, lead, gold paint fabric, ashes, sand, ceramic teeth, and plaster. Although the dress, the gold, and the teeth, together with the handwritten title, explicitly refer to the Greek myth

Auction archive: Lot number 19
Auction:
Datum:
12 Feb 2015
Auction house:
Phillips
London
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