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Auction archive: Lot number 30

George Condo

Estimate
£250,000 - £350,000
ca. US$401,748 - US$562,447
Price realised:
£434,500
ca. US$698,238
Auction archive: Lot number 30

George Condo

Estimate
£250,000 - £350,000
ca. US$401,748 - US$562,447
Price realised:
£434,500
ca. US$698,238
Beschreibung:

George Condo Grey Nude/Purple Cape 1991 oil on linen 134.5 x 199.9 cm (52 7/8 x 78 3/4 in.) Signed 'Condo 91' lower left.
Provenance Pace Gallery, New York Fabien Fryns Fine Art, Beijing Catalogue Essay Grey Nude/Purple Cape exemplifies George Condo’s innovative take on the recognisable image of the reclining nude. Painted in 1991, it draws inspiration from the work of Pablo Picasso and Henry Moore as well as finding long-established and iconic references in the tomes of art history. Describing his works from the 1990’s, the artist declares them as ‘somewhere between landscape and some kind of sexual construction of human physiognomy.’ Condo’s work is an amalgamation of traditional subjects, modern depictions and original interpretations. His compositions are carefully planned, as the artist creates numerous preparative sketches before composing the larger final work. Just in this process, the artist draws on art historical precedent. His material choice also reflects this: his paintings are primarily comprised of the traditionally established oil paint on canvas. Condo’s signature hybridisation of European Old Master painting with a Modernist and Pop sensibility was instrumental in reviving painting on an international scale in the 1980s. Recognised as an important figure to the post-modern tradition today, Condo bears ties with other stalwarts of American innovation, namely Keith Haring and Andy Warhol in whose Factory he worked early in his career. Over his more than 30-year career, Condo has never used photographic sources for the basis of his paintings, often drawing instead from a cast of imaginary sitters he conjures from his own head. His rich imagination is a world he both studies and inhabits. Rather than seeing history—and art history—as an impossible burden, the artist views it a liberator. His own non-linear acknowledgment and exploration of past and present makes Condo’s oeuvre markedly different from other painters who have preceded and followed him. Yet, the artist’s work is a foil to art historical tropes, creating innovative results that are achieved through the dismantling of the figure and its subsequent, disjointed reconstruction into a morphed, though intelligible form. The artist describes his technique using his own self-created art movement title, that of ‘Artificial Realism,’ which he coined in the early 1980s as he was emerging on the East Village art scene in New York City. The elements of this name reflect Condo’s interest in dismantling one reality and constructing another from the same discarded parts: ‘Any abstraction of reality involves some kind of distortion. The more recognizable something is, the more interesting it is after it’s been transformed or abstracted’ (George Condo in an interview with Morgan Falconer, Art World, June–July 2008, p. 62). This approach pays homage to titans of Modernism while simultaneously inventing a truly post-modern conception of the composition. Grey Nude/Purple Cape includes the characteristic elements of sexuality, eroticism and aesthetic that pertain to any nude. The figure’s confrontational posture is brazen and unashamed, drawing the viewer into the world of the painting whilst still presenting a level of provocative disaffection. The artist’s presentation of nudity as intrinsic and fundamental to the figure, rather than prescribed, effectively ensures its sexual connotations without relying on them. The naked body evokes a state of raw genesis and disclosure, returning humanity back to its native primitive state. The resulting effect is psychologically intense, Condo explains: ‘Picasso painted a violin from four different perspectives at one moment. I do the same with psychological states. Four of them can occur simultaneously.’ This abstraction is more than an exploration of planar geometry and an alteration of physical reality, the artist reveals emotive and unseen reality. Condo aims to alter perceived existence, revelling in the manipulated shapes and distortions featured in his portraits as well as the elasticity and changeable sensation of mental states. His paintings

Auction archive: Lot number 30
Auction:
Datum:
15 Oct 2014
Auction house:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

George Condo Grey Nude/Purple Cape 1991 oil on linen 134.5 x 199.9 cm (52 7/8 x 78 3/4 in.) Signed 'Condo 91' lower left.
Provenance Pace Gallery, New York Fabien Fryns Fine Art, Beijing Catalogue Essay Grey Nude/Purple Cape exemplifies George Condo’s innovative take on the recognisable image of the reclining nude. Painted in 1991, it draws inspiration from the work of Pablo Picasso and Henry Moore as well as finding long-established and iconic references in the tomes of art history. Describing his works from the 1990’s, the artist declares them as ‘somewhere between landscape and some kind of sexual construction of human physiognomy.’ Condo’s work is an amalgamation of traditional subjects, modern depictions and original interpretations. His compositions are carefully planned, as the artist creates numerous preparative sketches before composing the larger final work. Just in this process, the artist draws on art historical precedent. His material choice also reflects this: his paintings are primarily comprised of the traditionally established oil paint on canvas. Condo’s signature hybridisation of European Old Master painting with a Modernist and Pop sensibility was instrumental in reviving painting on an international scale in the 1980s. Recognised as an important figure to the post-modern tradition today, Condo bears ties with other stalwarts of American innovation, namely Keith Haring and Andy Warhol in whose Factory he worked early in his career. Over his more than 30-year career, Condo has never used photographic sources for the basis of his paintings, often drawing instead from a cast of imaginary sitters he conjures from his own head. His rich imagination is a world he both studies and inhabits. Rather than seeing history—and art history—as an impossible burden, the artist views it a liberator. His own non-linear acknowledgment and exploration of past and present makes Condo’s oeuvre markedly different from other painters who have preceded and followed him. Yet, the artist’s work is a foil to art historical tropes, creating innovative results that are achieved through the dismantling of the figure and its subsequent, disjointed reconstruction into a morphed, though intelligible form. The artist describes his technique using his own self-created art movement title, that of ‘Artificial Realism,’ which he coined in the early 1980s as he was emerging on the East Village art scene in New York City. The elements of this name reflect Condo’s interest in dismantling one reality and constructing another from the same discarded parts: ‘Any abstraction of reality involves some kind of distortion. The more recognizable something is, the more interesting it is after it’s been transformed or abstracted’ (George Condo in an interview with Morgan Falconer, Art World, June–July 2008, p. 62). This approach pays homage to titans of Modernism while simultaneously inventing a truly post-modern conception of the composition. Grey Nude/Purple Cape includes the characteristic elements of sexuality, eroticism and aesthetic that pertain to any nude. The figure’s confrontational posture is brazen and unashamed, drawing the viewer into the world of the painting whilst still presenting a level of provocative disaffection. The artist’s presentation of nudity as intrinsic and fundamental to the figure, rather than prescribed, effectively ensures its sexual connotations without relying on them. The naked body evokes a state of raw genesis and disclosure, returning humanity back to its native primitive state. The resulting effect is psychologically intense, Condo explains: ‘Picasso painted a violin from four different perspectives at one moment. I do the same with psychological states. Four of them can occur simultaneously.’ This abstraction is more than an exploration of planar geometry and an alteration of physical reality, the artist reveals emotive and unseen reality. Condo aims to alter perceived existence, revelling in the manipulated shapes and distortions featured in his portraits as well as the elasticity and changeable sensation of mental states. His paintings

Auction archive: Lot number 30
Auction:
Datum:
15 Oct 2014
Auction house:
Phillips
London
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