Gerhard Richter Abstraktes Bild (720-2) signed, numbered and dated "720•2 Richter 1990" on the reverse oil on canvas 48 x 40 ¼ in. (122 x 102 cm.) Painted in 1990.
Provenance Private Collection, Europe Private Collection, New York Literature Kunst-und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, ed., Gerhard Richter Werkübersicht/Catalogue Raisonné, Volume III, 1962-1993, Bonn, 1993, no. 720-2, pp. 124, 189 (illustrated) Dietmar Elger, Gerhard Richter Catalogue Raisonné, Volume 4, 1988-1994, Ostfildern, 2015, cat. no. 720-2, p. 310 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Recognized as one of the world’s preeminent painters, Gerhard Richter’s artistic evolution has produced mesmerizing, evocative and poetic works that culminate in a complete and visually complex oeuvre. Oscillating between figurative, constructive and abstract designations, Richter often returns to his own archive of creative production, referring to and assembling techniques with heightened awareness. This intellectually rigorous method imbues a physical and emotive layer to each of his works. The present lot, Abstraktes Bild (720-2), 1990, is a vibrant and luminous expression of Richter’s masterly ability. Abstraktes Bild (720-2) is a domestically scaled painting from a seminal moment in Richter’s career. Coming after his first major touring retrospective exhibition in 1986 but before his fullest retrospective exhibition to date in 1993, Abstraktes Bild sits squarely within a momentous period in his oeuvre. The viewer is immediately struck by an intense veil of saturated red, which coats the composition like Chinese red lacquer. Deep, entrancing, and invigorating, the matador-red summons the viewer to dive into illusionistic space within the composition. Beneath this scrim lies an abstracted landscape replete with washes of sky, or is it ocean, blue, sandy pinks, spring vegetal greens, crystalline cloud whites and earthen browns. Harkening back to his earlier landscapes, Richter goes beyond those blurred photo-realistic compositions and creates an alternate visual universe. “Almost all the abstract paintings show scenarios, surroundings and landscapes that don't exist, but they create the impression that they could exit. As though they were photographs of scenarios and regions that had never yet been seen." (Gerhard Richter “I Have Nothing to Say and I'm Saying It: Conversations between Gerhard Richter and Nicholas Serota,” Gerhard Richter Panorama, exh. cat., London, 2011, p. 19) Richter’s paintings function as windowed layers of color, each subtly announcing its presence while the viewer peers through the enlivened colors that lay just beyond–mise en abyme. “With abstract painting we created for ourselves a better possibility of approaching what is nonvisual and incomprehensible, because it portrays nothing directly visually, with all the means available to art. Used to recognizing something real in pictures, we rightly refuse to regard only colour (in all its multiplicity) as what has been made visible and instead involve ourselves in seeing the nonvisual, that which hitherto had never been seen and that is not visible…Thus paintings are all the better, the more beautiful, intelligent, crazy and extreme, the more clearly perceptible and the less decipherable metaphors they are for this incomprehensible reality. Art is the highest form of hope.” (Gerhard Richter in, Documenta 7, Kassel, exh. cat., 1982, p.119) Richter achieves each abstract picture through a uniquely restrained process, and the harmony of the present lot glows with mesmerizing abandon. Hints of lucid green, cherry blossom pink, and slate grey poke through a secondary layered veil of royal blue and brilliant white. Delicate in its translucence, it is tucked beneath the overarching wash of red masking the canvas. The kaleidoscopic surface both reveals and conceals a myriad of layers, colors and illusions. The liquid surface of the canvas, applied in waves of viscous pigment, belies a view of some unknown landscape, spotted with withering rays from the setting sun. Richter’s rhythm of painting on the canvas gives way to inherent movement in the picture. Ab
Gerhard Richter Abstraktes Bild (720-2) signed, numbered and dated "720•2 Richter 1990" on the reverse oil on canvas 48 x 40 ¼ in. (122 x 102 cm.) Painted in 1990.
Provenance Private Collection, Europe Private Collection, New York Literature Kunst-und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, ed., Gerhard Richter Werkübersicht/Catalogue Raisonné, Volume III, 1962-1993, Bonn, 1993, no. 720-2, pp. 124, 189 (illustrated) Dietmar Elger, Gerhard Richter Catalogue Raisonné, Volume 4, 1988-1994, Ostfildern, 2015, cat. no. 720-2, p. 310 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Recognized as one of the world’s preeminent painters, Gerhard Richter’s artistic evolution has produced mesmerizing, evocative and poetic works that culminate in a complete and visually complex oeuvre. Oscillating between figurative, constructive and abstract designations, Richter often returns to his own archive of creative production, referring to and assembling techniques with heightened awareness. This intellectually rigorous method imbues a physical and emotive layer to each of his works. The present lot, Abstraktes Bild (720-2), 1990, is a vibrant and luminous expression of Richter’s masterly ability. Abstraktes Bild (720-2) is a domestically scaled painting from a seminal moment in Richter’s career. Coming after his first major touring retrospective exhibition in 1986 but before his fullest retrospective exhibition to date in 1993, Abstraktes Bild sits squarely within a momentous period in his oeuvre. The viewer is immediately struck by an intense veil of saturated red, which coats the composition like Chinese red lacquer. Deep, entrancing, and invigorating, the matador-red summons the viewer to dive into illusionistic space within the composition. Beneath this scrim lies an abstracted landscape replete with washes of sky, or is it ocean, blue, sandy pinks, spring vegetal greens, crystalline cloud whites and earthen browns. Harkening back to his earlier landscapes, Richter goes beyond those blurred photo-realistic compositions and creates an alternate visual universe. “Almost all the abstract paintings show scenarios, surroundings and landscapes that don't exist, but they create the impression that they could exit. As though they were photographs of scenarios and regions that had never yet been seen." (Gerhard Richter “I Have Nothing to Say and I'm Saying It: Conversations between Gerhard Richter and Nicholas Serota,” Gerhard Richter Panorama, exh. cat., London, 2011, p. 19) Richter’s paintings function as windowed layers of color, each subtly announcing its presence while the viewer peers through the enlivened colors that lay just beyond–mise en abyme. “With abstract painting we created for ourselves a better possibility of approaching what is nonvisual and incomprehensible, because it portrays nothing directly visually, with all the means available to art. Used to recognizing something real in pictures, we rightly refuse to regard only colour (in all its multiplicity) as what has been made visible and instead involve ourselves in seeing the nonvisual, that which hitherto had never been seen and that is not visible…Thus paintings are all the better, the more beautiful, intelligent, crazy and extreme, the more clearly perceptible and the less decipherable metaphors they are for this incomprehensible reality. Art is the highest form of hope.” (Gerhard Richter in, Documenta 7, Kassel, exh. cat., 1982, p.119) Richter achieves each abstract picture through a uniquely restrained process, and the harmony of the present lot glows with mesmerizing abandon. Hints of lucid green, cherry blossom pink, and slate grey poke through a secondary layered veil of royal blue and brilliant white. Delicate in its translucence, it is tucked beneath the overarching wash of red masking the canvas. The kaleidoscopic surface both reveals and conceals a myriad of layers, colors and illusions. The liquid surface of the canvas, applied in waves of viscous pigment, belies a view of some unknown landscape, spotted with withering rays from the setting sun. Richter’s rhythm of painting on the canvas gives way to inherent movement in the picture. Ab
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