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Auction archive: Lot number 20

Cy Twombly

Estimate
£8,000,000 - £12,000,000
ca. US$12,264,344 - US$18,396,516
Price realised:
£7,922,500
ca. US$12,145,533
Auction archive: Lot number 20

Cy Twombly

Estimate
£8,000,000 - £12,000,000
ca. US$12,264,344 - US$18,396,516
Price realised:
£7,922,500
ca. US$12,145,533
Beschreibung:

Cy Twombly Untitled 2006 acrylic on canvas 215 x 167.8 cm (84 5/8 x 66 1/8 in.) Initialled 'CT' upper left.
Provenance Thomas Ammann Fine Art, Zurich Phillips de Pury, New York, Contemporary Art, Part I, 7 November 2011, lot 20 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited Zurich, Thomas Ammann Fine Art AG, Cy Twombly 1 June – 28 September, 2007 Literature G. Frei, Cy Twombly Thomas Ammann Fine Art AG, Zurich, 2007, pl. IV (illustrated) H. Bastian, Cy Twombly Catalogue Raisonné of the Paintings, Volume V, 1996-2007, Munich 2009, pp. 149-150 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Untitled, 2006 is from a series of paintings which were all completed in the autumn of 2006 in Cy Twombly’s hometown of Lexington, Virginia. These works mark the final stage of the artist’s prolific painterly career, and as such act as emphatic illustrations of the artist’s mature style. Moreover, the eloquent marriage of several key styles that defined parts of his artistic development imbues the work with further importance. The monochrome background, the single line, the overlapping loops and the raw red pigment all represent an element from his many series’ of works but here they are presented in symbiotic harmony. Thus, the series of works produced in the final years of Twombly’s life contain a gravitas most reminiscent of a conscious final ode and one that gives a sense of closure through its all-encompassing yet simple nature. Each work from this series, whilst unique in character, shares a vertical format and similar height, with slight variations in width. Similarly every painting is untitled and depicts crimson red lines flowing in circular motions reminiscent of handwriting. The densely layered lines swell and break off, and even come to a halt as they move across the picture plane in what seems like an ecstatic dance. It is through the sinuously curving forms that Untitled gains its paradoxical appearance characterised by its constrained rhythmical fluidity as much as its expressive calligraphy. With its grounding in the tradition of European expressionism Twombly’s canvas evokes an impression of lightness, untainted by the skeins of paint and chaos of the looped shapes. Divided into clear sections, the running calligraphic scrawls emerge as an exercise in repetition, as if a schoolchild were learning to write. Twombly employs a linear continuity that had specifically been excluded in earlier works from the 1960s. On the other hand, the artist’s frequent use of the 'O' shape is once again employed in this composition, thus harking back to pieces such as Olympia, 1957. It is this association to his earlier works which prompts us to reflect on the development of Twombly’s symbolic language in the present lot. His forms have developed into abstract signs which, despite their illegibility, create a mode of communication, concealing the artist’s narrative therein. Untitled is separated into four main horizontal bands: it begins at the top left with the initials 'C.T.' followed by a garland of paint. Three horizontal rows follow below, each increasing in magnitude as the lines approach the bottom of the canvas and becoming more loosely connected as they do. The overlapping and billowing handwriting is tour-de-force in its nuances of tone, brightness, and saturation. The vertical format of the painting, its light coloured background, and the organization of the cursive lines invite us to “read” the present lot like the page of a book. Twombly introduces himself at the top of his text with his initials and then, withdrawing from any legible writing and coherent language, begins a non-verbal narrative. His brush produces shapes that recall cursive handwriting, and tells the story of sloping lines and dripping rivulets. The vitality of the signs promotes a desire to read and interpret them; however, existing in their own realm of symbolism, they are destined to remain obscure. The challenge of deciphering the text is as much part of the painting as the visual drama of its mystery. At the end of his seven-decade career, Twombly unites all the contradi

Auction archive: Lot number 20
Auction:
Datum:
14 Oct 2015
Auction house:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

Cy Twombly Untitled 2006 acrylic on canvas 215 x 167.8 cm (84 5/8 x 66 1/8 in.) Initialled 'CT' upper left.
Provenance Thomas Ammann Fine Art, Zurich Phillips de Pury, New York, Contemporary Art, Part I, 7 November 2011, lot 20 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited Zurich, Thomas Ammann Fine Art AG, Cy Twombly 1 June – 28 September, 2007 Literature G. Frei, Cy Twombly Thomas Ammann Fine Art AG, Zurich, 2007, pl. IV (illustrated) H. Bastian, Cy Twombly Catalogue Raisonné of the Paintings, Volume V, 1996-2007, Munich 2009, pp. 149-150 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Untitled, 2006 is from a series of paintings which were all completed in the autumn of 2006 in Cy Twombly’s hometown of Lexington, Virginia. These works mark the final stage of the artist’s prolific painterly career, and as such act as emphatic illustrations of the artist’s mature style. Moreover, the eloquent marriage of several key styles that defined parts of his artistic development imbues the work with further importance. The monochrome background, the single line, the overlapping loops and the raw red pigment all represent an element from his many series’ of works but here they are presented in symbiotic harmony. Thus, the series of works produced in the final years of Twombly’s life contain a gravitas most reminiscent of a conscious final ode and one that gives a sense of closure through its all-encompassing yet simple nature. Each work from this series, whilst unique in character, shares a vertical format and similar height, with slight variations in width. Similarly every painting is untitled and depicts crimson red lines flowing in circular motions reminiscent of handwriting. The densely layered lines swell and break off, and even come to a halt as they move across the picture plane in what seems like an ecstatic dance. It is through the sinuously curving forms that Untitled gains its paradoxical appearance characterised by its constrained rhythmical fluidity as much as its expressive calligraphy. With its grounding in the tradition of European expressionism Twombly’s canvas evokes an impression of lightness, untainted by the skeins of paint and chaos of the looped shapes. Divided into clear sections, the running calligraphic scrawls emerge as an exercise in repetition, as if a schoolchild were learning to write. Twombly employs a linear continuity that had specifically been excluded in earlier works from the 1960s. On the other hand, the artist’s frequent use of the 'O' shape is once again employed in this composition, thus harking back to pieces such as Olympia, 1957. It is this association to his earlier works which prompts us to reflect on the development of Twombly’s symbolic language in the present lot. His forms have developed into abstract signs which, despite their illegibility, create a mode of communication, concealing the artist’s narrative therein. Untitled is separated into four main horizontal bands: it begins at the top left with the initials 'C.T.' followed by a garland of paint. Three horizontal rows follow below, each increasing in magnitude as the lines approach the bottom of the canvas and becoming more loosely connected as they do. The overlapping and billowing handwriting is tour-de-force in its nuances of tone, brightness, and saturation. The vertical format of the painting, its light coloured background, and the organization of the cursive lines invite us to “read” the present lot like the page of a book. Twombly introduces himself at the top of his text with his initials and then, withdrawing from any legible writing and coherent language, begins a non-verbal narrative. His brush produces shapes that recall cursive handwriting, and tells the story of sloping lines and dripping rivulets. The vitality of the signs promotes a desire to read and interpret them; however, existing in their own realm of symbolism, they are destined to remain obscure. The challenge of deciphering the text is as much part of the painting as the visual drama of its mystery. At the end of his seven-decade career, Twombly unites all the contradi

Auction archive: Lot number 20
Auction:
Datum:
14 Oct 2015
Auction house:
Phillips
London
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