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Auction archive: Lot number 21

Mark Tansey

Estimate
£1,500,000 - £2,000,000
ca. US$1,968,039 - US$2,624,052
Price realised:
£1,569,000
ca. US$2,058,568
Auction archive: Lot number 21

Mark Tansey

Estimate
£1,500,000 - £2,000,000
ca. US$1,968,039 - US$2,624,052
Price realised:
£1,569,000
ca. US$2,058,568
Beschreibung:

Mark Tansey Follow Library (of Babylon) each signed, titled and dated 'Tansey 1994 "Library (of Babylon)"' on the reverse oil on canvas, in 2 parts overall 149.9 x 489 cm (59 x 192 1/2 in.) Painted in 1994.
Provenance Gagosian Gallery, New York Phillips, London, 27 June 2011, lot 21 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited Denver Art Museum; Columbus Museum of Art, Visions of America, Landscape as Metaphor in the Late Twentieth Century , 14 May 1994 - 8 January 1995, pp. 172-173, 228, 230, 253 (illustrated p. 230) Video Mark Tansey 'Library (of Babylon)' On view now in our 20th Century and Contemporary Art Evening Sale preview. Catalogue Essay Spanning nearly five metres, Mark Tansey’s vast Library (of Babylon) from 1994 draws the viewer into a richly detailed panorama that unfolds cinematically before our eyes. Rendered in Tansey’s signature virtuosic style and blue-washed monochromatic palette, starkly illuminated architectural fragments emerge from an abyss of darkness and unravel in a state of continuous becoming. With its title, the painting evokes Jorge Louis Borges’ 1941 short story The Library of Babel, and, by extension, the ancient origin myth of Babel – both of which Tansey alludes to in his construction of an enigmatic realm where a cavernous vaulted library provides glimpses into a distant world modelled on Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s Tower of Babel , 1563. Exemplary of Tansey’s profound philosophical and art historical knowledge, a plethora of historical and contemporary references merge into a surreal vignette that invites the viewer to participate in a visual and metaphorical adventure into the perception of reality. Painted in 1994, Library (of Babylon) debuted in the group exhibition Visions of America: Landscape as Metaphor in the Late Twentieth Century that travelled to the Denver Art Museum and Columbus Museum of Art in the following year. Exhibited alongside paintings such as Landscape , 1994, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art , the present work is a quintessential example of Tansey’s pursuit of figurative painting in an art world context that had declared it dead in favour of abstract and conceptual approaches. Walking in the conceptual footsteps of forebears such as Giorgio de Chirico and René Magritte Tansey utilises allegory, symbolism and metaphor in painting to probe questions of meaning and representation, without, however, using overtly surrealistic devices. Library (of Babylon) developed out of Tansey’s deep preoccupation with the philosophies of French structuralism and deconstructivism, as well as the question of the relationship between image and text. As with Constructing the Grand Canyon , 1990, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, 1990, Tansey puts forth a landscape that is in constant process of construction and deconstruction. Whereas in earlier paintings Tansey explored the futility of language to capture reality through the inclusion of textual fragments, here he does so more subtly – alluding to Borges’ The Library of Babel as a metaphor for mankind’s existential quest for meaning. In The Library of Babel, Borges conceived a universe as a vast expanse of indefinite and near infinite number of hexagonal galleries, each of which contains the bare necessities for human survival and four walls of bookshelves. Containing every book ever written or that will be written, the inhabitants, faced with a gluttony of enigmatic information they cannot make sense of, experience a state of near-suicidal despair. The short story itself was based on the biblical story of the ancient city state of Babylon, long considered as the birth place of Western civilisation. Seeking to explain the existence of diverse human languages, the Old Testament postulated that it was when civilisation, united by a single language, sought to build a tower tall enough to reach heaven, God confounded their speech so they would not be able to complete this Tower of Babel. With Library (of Babylon), Tansey has merged fragments of Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s Tower of Babel , 1563, at the upper left, with the complex architectural framework of the Eiffel Tower and the subterranean vaults of Giovanni Battista Pirane

Auction archive: Lot number 21
Auction:
Datum:
27 Jun 2018
Auction house:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

Mark Tansey Follow Library (of Babylon) each signed, titled and dated 'Tansey 1994 "Library (of Babylon)"' on the reverse oil on canvas, in 2 parts overall 149.9 x 489 cm (59 x 192 1/2 in.) Painted in 1994.
Provenance Gagosian Gallery, New York Phillips, London, 27 June 2011, lot 21 Acquired at the above sale by the present owner Exhibited Denver Art Museum; Columbus Museum of Art, Visions of America, Landscape as Metaphor in the Late Twentieth Century , 14 May 1994 - 8 January 1995, pp. 172-173, 228, 230, 253 (illustrated p. 230) Video Mark Tansey 'Library (of Babylon)' On view now in our 20th Century and Contemporary Art Evening Sale preview. Catalogue Essay Spanning nearly five metres, Mark Tansey’s vast Library (of Babylon) from 1994 draws the viewer into a richly detailed panorama that unfolds cinematically before our eyes. Rendered in Tansey’s signature virtuosic style and blue-washed monochromatic palette, starkly illuminated architectural fragments emerge from an abyss of darkness and unravel in a state of continuous becoming. With its title, the painting evokes Jorge Louis Borges’ 1941 short story The Library of Babel, and, by extension, the ancient origin myth of Babel – both of which Tansey alludes to in his construction of an enigmatic realm where a cavernous vaulted library provides glimpses into a distant world modelled on Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s Tower of Babel , 1563. Exemplary of Tansey’s profound philosophical and art historical knowledge, a plethora of historical and contemporary references merge into a surreal vignette that invites the viewer to participate in a visual and metaphorical adventure into the perception of reality. Painted in 1994, Library (of Babylon) debuted in the group exhibition Visions of America: Landscape as Metaphor in the Late Twentieth Century that travelled to the Denver Art Museum and Columbus Museum of Art in the following year. Exhibited alongside paintings such as Landscape , 1994, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art , the present work is a quintessential example of Tansey’s pursuit of figurative painting in an art world context that had declared it dead in favour of abstract and conceptual approaches. Walking in the conceptual footsteps of forebears such as Giorgio de Chirico and René Magritte Tansey utilises allegory, symbolism and metaphor in painting to probe questions of meaning and representation, without, however, using overtly surrealistic devices. Library (of Babylon) developed out of Tansey’s deep preoccupation with the philosophies of French structuralism and deconstructivism, as well as the question of the relationship between image and text. As with Constructing the Grand Canyon , 1990, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, 1990, Tansey puts forth a landscape that is in constant process of construction and deconstruction. Whereas in earlier paintings Tansey explored the futility of language to capture reality through the inclusion of textual fragments, here he does so more subtly – alluding to Borges’ The Library of Babel as a metaphor for mankind’s existential quest for meaning. In The Library of Babel, Borges conceived a universe as a vast expanse of indefinite and near infinite number of hexagonal galleries, each of which contains the bare necessities for human survival and four walls of bookshelves. Containing every book ever written or that will be written, the inhabitants, faced with a gluttony of enigmatic information they cannot make sense of, experience a state of near-suicidal despair. The short story itself was based on the biblical story of the ancient city state of Babylon, long considered as the birth place of Western civilisation. Seeking to explain the existence of diverse human languages, the Old Testament postulated that it was when civilisation, united by a single language, sought to build a tower tall enough to reach heaven, God confounded their speech so they would not be able to complete this Tower of Babel. With Library (of Babylon), Tansey has merged fragments of Pieter Bruegel the Elder’s Tower of Babel , 1563, at the upper left, with the complex architectural framework of the Eiffel Tower and the subterranean vaults of Giovanni Battista Pirane

Auction archive: Lot number 21
Auction:
Datum:
27 Jun 2018
Auction house:
Phillips
London
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