Premium pages left without account:

Auction archive: Lot number 7

Christopher Wool

Estimate
£1,200,000 - £1,800,000
ca. US$1,481,277 - US$2,221,916
Price realised:
£1,205,000
ca. US$1,487,449
Auction archive: Lot number 7

Christopher Wool

Estimate
£1,200,000 - £1,800,000
ca. US$1,481,277 - US$2,221,916
Price realised:
£1,205,000
ca. US$1,487,449
Beschreibung:

Christopher Wool Untitled signed and dated 'WOOL 1989' on the reverse acrylic on aluminium 243.9 x 183 cm (96 x 72 in.) Painted in 1989.
Provenance Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York Daniel Weinberg Gallery, Santa Monica Leo Koenig Inc., New York Acquired from the above by the present owner Catalogue Essay Oscillating between the abstract and the figurative, the majestic black eagles of Christopher Wool’s 1989 Untitled appear suspended in mid-air against a white smooth aluminium surface. The monochrome black eagle, one of the artist’s most instantly recognisable motifs, is an exemplary design of the artist’s pivotal rubber stamp series. The repetitious nature of the composition pushes the boundaries of image production and reproduction in contemporary art, stressing the artist’s intellectual engagement with conceptual artistic discourse. At plain sight one is exposed with a patterned-canvas of six seemingly-identical eagles. Yet closer inspection reveals a subtly sophisticated process where no two birds are identical. Through the use of large-format rubber stamps, the imagery is kept uniform whilst the application of paint is altered with each impression. The undeviating pattern is thus contrasted with the subtle variation of paint, in turn stressing the importance of the artist’s technique. As Ann Goldstein explains, 'through process, technique, scale, composition, and imagery, Wool’s work accentuates the tensions and contradictions between the act of painting, the construction of a picture, its physical attributes, the visual experience of looking at it, and the possibilities of playing with and pushing open the thresholds of its meanings. They are defined by what they’re not—and what they hold back.' (Ann Goldstein in exh. cat., Christopher Wool Los Angeles, The Museum of Contemporary Art (and travelling), 1998, p. 263). In an exploration of the relationship between painting and process, Wool’s rubber stamp paintings must thus be understood in terms of the picture-making method. This attention to methodology is strongly reminiscent of Andy Warhol’s own developments in silkscreen printing decades earlier. In a similar attention to process Warhol’s ambition was for himself, as an artist, to become as machine-like as possible. To achieve this goal, the artist partook in the creation of repeatedly printed motifs, from dollar signs to flowers, which in turn became a metaphor for the mass media pop culture invading the United States in the 1950s and 60s. The 1980s marked the beginning of Wool’s mature artistic practice. The rubber stamp paintings, exemplified in the present work, are regarded as a continuation of the rubber roller series, a practice previously employed by the artist in the early 1980s. Selecting banal, recognisable imagery, including flowers, dots or clovers, Wool printed uninterrupted patterns without an apparent beginning or end. Commonly used to apply decorative wallpaper patterns to walls, Wool made use of the process to print these seemingly arbitrary objects on canvas. This process has later been developed by artists such as Rudolf Stingel who, through an application of paint using a fine stencil, creates wallpaper designs, equally achieving a patterned outcome from relentless repetition. Wool’s advancements in contemporary picture making came at a difficult time for the art world. Propelled by the global economic growth, the collapse of state-sponsored socialism and an accelerated modernisation, the art world of the 1980s had received a strong critical and conclusive declaration from art historian Douglas Crimp, who declared ‘The End of Painting’. However, through Wool’s innovative use of the medium, appropriating decorative wallpaper tools such as the rubber roller or the rubber stamp, he decisively achieved an expansion of the definition of painting, accentuating the longevity of the medium as opposed to its professed mortality. Wool’s rubber stamp series additionally present a dialogue between utilitarian design and unique artistic creation. Since Ancient Rome and throughout history, the eagle has been used as a symbol, sculpted and p

Auction archive: Lot number 7
Auction:
Datum:
8 Mar 2017
Auction house:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

Christopher Wool Untitled signed and dated 'WOOL 1989' on the reverse acrylic on aluminium 243.9 x 183 cm (96 x 72 in.) Painted in 1989.
Provenance Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York Daniel Weinberg Gallery, Santa Monica Leo Koenig Inc., New York Acquired from the above by the present owner Catalogue Essay Oscillating between the abstract and the figurative, the majestic black eagles of Christopher Wool’s 1989 Untitled appear suspended in mid-air against a white smooth aluminium surface. The monochrome black eagle, one of the artist’s most instantly recognisable motifs, is an exemplary design of the artist’s pivotal rubber stamp series. The repetitious nature of the composition pushes the boundaries of image production and reproduction in contemporary art, stressing the artist’s intellectual engagement with conceptual artistic discourse. At plain sight one is exposed with a patterned-canvas of six seemingly-identical eagles. Yet closer inspection reveals a subtly sophisticated process where no two birds are identical. Through the use of large-format rubber stamps, the imagery is kept uniform whilst the application of paint is altered with each impression. The undeviating pattern is thus contrasted with the subtle variation of paint, in turn stressing the importance of the artist’s technique. As Ann Goldstein explains, 'through process, technique, scale, composition, and imagery, Wool’s work accentuates the tensions and contradictions between the act of painting, the construction of a picture, its physical attributes, the visual experience of looking at it, and the possibilities of playing with and pushing open the thresholds of its meanings. They are defined by what they’re not—and what they hold back.' (Ann Goldstein in exh. cat., Christopher Wool Los Angeles, The Museum of Contemporary Art (and travelling), 1998, p. 263). In an exploration of the relationship between painting and process, Wool’s rubber stamp paintings must thus be understood in terms of the picture-making method. This attention to methodology is strongly reminiscent of Andy Warhol’s own developments in silkscreen printing decades earlier. In a similar attention to process Warhol’s ambition was for himself, as an artist, to become as machine-like as possible. To achieve this goal, the artist partook in the creation of repeatedly printed motifs, from dollar signs to flowers, which in turn became a metaphor for the mass media pop culture invading the United States in the 1950s and 60s. The 1980s marked the beginning of Wool’s mature artistic practice. The rubber stamp paintings, exemplified in the present work, are regarded as a continuation of the rubber roller series, a practice previously employed by the artist in the early 1980s. Selecting banal, recognisable imagery, including flowers, dots or clovers, Wool printed uninterrupted patterns without an apparent beginning or end. Commonly used to apply decorative wallpaper patterns to walls, Wool made use of the process to print these seemingly arbitrary objects on canvas. This process has later been developed by artists such as Rudolf Stingel who, through an application of paint using a fine stencil, creates wallpaper designs, equally achieving a patterned outcome from relentless repetition. Wool’s advancements in contemporary picture making came at a difficult time for the art world. Propelled by the global economic growth, the collapse of state-sponsored socialism and an accelerated modernisation, the art world of the 1980s had received a strong critical and conclusive declaration from art historian Douglas Crimp, who declared ‘The End of Painting’. However, through Wool’s innovative use of the medium, appropriating decorative wallpaper tools such as the rubber roller or the rubber stamp, he decisively achieved an expansion of the definition of painting, accentuating the longevity of the medium as opposed to its professed mortality. Wool’s rubber stamp series additionally present a dialogue between utilitarian design and unique artistic creation. Since Ancient Rome and throughout history, the eagle has been used as a symbol, sculpted and p

Auction archive: Lot number 7
Auction:
Datum:
8 Mar 2017
Auction house:
Phillips
London
Try LotSearch

Try LotSearch and its premium features for 7 days - without any costs!

  • Search lots and bid
  • Price database and artist analysis
  • Alerts for your searches
Create an alert now!

Be notified automatically about new items in upcoming auctions.

Create an alert