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Auction archive: Lot number 157

Louise Bourgeois

Estimate
US$30,000 - US$40,000
Price realised:
US$68,750
Auction archive: Lot number 157

Louise Bourgeois

Estimate
US$30,000 - US$40,000
Price realised:
US$68,750
Beschreibung:

Louise Bourgeois Untitled signed "L. Bourgeois" lower right ink on graph paper 8 3/4 x 13 1/4 in. (22.2 x 33.7 cm.) Executed in 1949.
Provenance Galerie Lelong, Zurich Peter Blum Gallery, New York Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited New York, Robert Miller; Paris, Daniel Lelong, Louise Bourgeois Drawings, January 1988, no. 88 (illustrated) New York, Mitchell-Innes & Nash, Works on Paper: Territories, September 30 - November 30, 2011 New York, Mitchell-Innes & Nash, Days Inn, September 4 - October 10, 2014 Catalogue Essay To fully understand the personal nature of Louise Bourgeois’s extensive practice, it is important to study not only the artist’s famous large-scale bronze and steel sculptures, but also her mastery of mediums beyond three-dimensionality, specifically in drawing. Each executed between 1948 and 2002, the following seven drawings showcase the range of motifs and techniques explored over the course of Bourgeois’s long career, offering a deep look into the breadth of aesthetics and meanings that she continually revisited. They serve as a testament to the personal nature of her work, developed independently of contemporary pressures and influences of the time in which they were conceived. As Josef Helfenstein explained, “…Bourgeois’s drawings perform a function related not to her art but to the artist herself and her purely private emotions. In this sense, her drawings are always autonomous and form a discrete body of work that exists independently of her sculpture.” (Josef Helfenstein, Louise Bourgeois Drawings & Observations, exh. cat., University Art Museum, Berkeley, 1995, p. 8) For Bourgeois, the medium of drawing existed as a distinct form of expression in its own right, and she continued exploring the medium up until her death in 2010. While the works presented here recall imagery found throughout the artist’s overall practice, each of these works stands alone as a finished piece and not as preparatory sketches or plans for later sculptures. In this way, each drawing highlights the artist’s device of repetition, through which she continually turned to the same inspiration and sources. While her sculptures went largely unnoticed until the late 1970s, her drawings were even more clandestine in nature, neither published nor exhibited until a full ten years later. The reveal of such masterworks in the 1980s and 1990s offered an even deeper look into the artist’s mind and practice than did her sculptures. As the artist herself said, “Everything is fleeting, but your drawing will serve as a reminder; otherwise it is forgotten.” (Louise Bourgeois quoted in Louise Bourgeois Drawings & Observations, exh. cat., University Art Museum, Berkeley, 1995, p. 21) Bourgeois’s early drawings from the 1940s and 1950s were largely based on memories from her childhood. Born in Paris to parents who restored Renaissance tapestries, she was fascinated by the surrounding draped fabrics adorned with plant and floral designs. These feather-like motifs are evident in the Untitled works from 1948, 1949 and 1950, meditatively drawn in hatched lines, varying in density, which in turn create the illusion of highlights and shadows. Lot 164 from 1949 features a unique floral design, hanging from an invisible support at the top of the page with globular shapes extending from a central line. Another drawing from this same year, lot 160, presents another abstract composition on a piece of notebook graph paper, showcasing what appears to be draped fabric, perhaps directly influenced by the hanging tapestries the artist remembered from her childhood home. Most likely drawn from memory, the fabric’s folds are convincing in their variation, demonstrating Bourgeois’s mastery of the medium. This work, alongside an even earlier work from 1947 on blue paper, was exhibited in one of the artist’s first solo shows of her drawings in 1988 at the Robert Miller Gallery in New York and Daniel Lelong’s gallery in Paris. Both works are unique for their surfaces; lot 163, resembling a sketch for one of her famous personnages on blue paper is evidence of Bourgeois’s favorite

Auction archive: Lot number 157
Auction:
Datum:
17 Nov 2016
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

Louise Bourgeois Untitled signed "L. Bourgeois" lower right ink on graph paper 8 3/4 x 13 1/4 in. (22.2 x 33.7 cm.) Executed in 1949.
Provenance Galerie Lelong, Zurich Peter Blum Gallery, New York Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited New York, Robert Miller; Paris, Daniel Lelong, Louise Bourgeois Drawings, January 1988, no. 88 (illustrated) New York, Mitchell-Innes & Nash, Works on Paper: Territories, September 30 - November 30, 2011 New York, Mitchell-Innes & Nash, Days Inn, September 4 - October 10, 2014 Catalogue Essay To fully understand the personal nature of Louise Bourgeois’s extensive practice, it is important to study not only the artist’s famous large-scale bronze and steel sculptures, but also her mastery of mediums beyond three-dimensionality, specifically in drawing. Each executed between 1948 and 2002, the following seven drawings showcase the range of motifs and techniques explored over the course of Bourgeois’s long career, offering a deep look into the breadth of aesthetics and meanings that she continually revisited. They serve as a testament to the personal nature of her work, developed independently of contemporary pressures and influences of the time in which they were conceived. As Josef Helfenstein explained, “…Bourgeois’s drawings perform a function related not to her art but to the artist herself and her purely private emotions. In this sense, her drawings are always autonomous and form a discrete body of work that exists independently of her sculpture.” (Josef Helfenstein, Louise Bourgeois Drawings & Observations, exh. cat., University Art Museum, Berkeley, 1995, p. 8) For Bourgeois, the medium of drawing existed as a distinct form of expression in its own right, and she continued exploring the medium up until her death in 2010. While the works presented here recall imagery found throughout the artist’s overall practice, each of these works stands alone as a finished piece and not as preparatory sketches or plans for later sculptures. In this way, each drawing highlights the artist’s device of repetition, through which she continually turned to the same inspiration and sources. While her sculptures went largely unnoticed until the late 1970s, her drawings were even more clandestine in nature, neither published nor exhibited until a full ten years later. The reveal of such masterworks in the 1980s and 1990s offered an even deeper look into the artist’s mind and practice than did her sculptures. As the artist herself said, “Everything is fleeting, but your drawing will serve as a reminder; otherwise it is forgotten.” (Louise Bourgeois quoted in Louise Bourgeois Drawings & Observations, exh. cat., University Art Museum, Berkeley, 1995, p. 21) Bourgeois’s early drawings from the 1940s and 1950s were largely based on memories from her childhood. Born in Paris to parents who restored Renaissance tapestries, she was fascinated by the surrounding draped fabrics adorned with plant and floral designs. These feather-like motifs are evident in the Untitled works from 1948, 1949 and 1950, meditatively drawn in hatched lines, varying in density, which in turn create the illusion of highlights and shadows. Lot 164 from 1949 features a unique floral design, hanging from an invisible support at the top of the page with globular shapes extending from a central line. Another drawing from this same year, lot 160, presents another abstract composition on a piece of notebook graph paper, showcasing what appears to be draped fabric, perhaps directly influenced by the hanging tapestries the artist remembered from her childhood home. Most likely drawn from memory, the fabric’s folds are convincing in their variation, demonstrating Bourgeois’s mastery of the medium. This work, alongside an even earlier work from 1947 on blue paper, was exhibited in one of the artist’s first solo shows of her drawings in 1988 at the Robert Miller Gallery in New York and Daniel Lelong’s gallery in Paris. Both works are unique for their surfaces; lot 163, resembling a sketch for one of her famous personnages on blue paper is evidence of Bourgeois’s favorite

Auction archive: Lot number 157
Auction:
Datum:
17 Nov 2016
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
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