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Auction archive: Lot number 118

Sam Francis

Estimate
US$40,000 - US$60,000
Price realised:
US$43,750
Auction archive: Lot number 118

Sam Francis

Estimate
US$40,000 - US$60,000
Price realised:
US$43,750
Beschreibung:

Property from the Estate of Howard Karshan Sam Francis Follow Untitled (Circle Entre Noir et Blanc) signed and dated "Sam Francis 1953, Dec." on the reverse ink and watercolor on paper 21 1/2 x 17 in. (54.6 x 43.2 cm.) Executed in 1953-54. This work is identified with the interim identification number of SF54-015 in consideration for the forthcoming Sam Francis Catalogue Raisonné of Unique Works on Paper . This information is subject to change as scholarship continues by the Sam Francis Foundation.
Condition Report Request Condition Report Thank you for your request. The Condition Report will be sent shortly. Contact Us * Required Send me the Report Via Email Fax Contact Specialist Cancel Provenance Paul Jenkins New York Robert Elkon Gallery, New York (?) Minami Gallery, Tokyo (?) Christie's, New York, September 23, 2003, lot 14 Acquired at the above sale by the late owner Exhibited Hanover, Kestner-Gesellschaft, Sam Francis , April 25 - May 28, 1963, no. 31, p. 44 Buffalo, Albright-Knox Art Gallery; Washington, D.C., Corcoran Gallery of Art; New York, Whitney Museum of American Art; Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Sam Francis Paintings 1947-1972 , September 11, 1972 - March 18, 1973, no. 88, p. 108 (illustrated) New York, Robert Elkon Gallery, Sam Francis The Fifties , December 11, 1974 - January 8, 1975 Literature Peter Selz, Sam Francis , New York, 1975, pl. 80, p. 151 (illustrated) Peter Selz, Sam Francis , New York, 1982, pl. 86, p. 163 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay “New York light is hard. Paris light is a beautiful cerulean gray. But Los Angeles light is clear and bright even in haze.” Sam Francis This selection of four masterworks on paper by Sam Francis each executed between 1950-1955 during an important and formative period of the artist’s prolific career, exemplifies key stylistic characteristics that the artist explored throughout his oeuvre. California-born artist Sam Francis’ first important paintings dating to 1947 were all executed on paper, and his devotion to paper as a medium was unwavering from that point forward. Throughout his career, Francis used paper as a medium for pictorial investigations, creating both autonomous works of art and studies for larger paintings. In her review of Francis' exhibition at Martha Jackson Gallery in 1959, Dore Ashton discussed the successful qualities of the artist's watercolors, which are also present in this selection of works: "The floating, the falling (helped by rivulets of color allowed to drop down), the gratuitous meetings in space, the junctures and coincidences which Francis is best equipped to express are endowed with a magic in watercolors that the oils do not possess" (Dore Ashton, quoted in Peter Selz, Sam Francis , New York, 1982, p. 73). In the fall of 1950, Francis moved to Paris from his native California after a brief visit to New York. Francis long considered Paris the “mother city”, having first been exposed to French culture by his own mother, who loved the language and traditions, and the city would come to nurture him at this determinative point in his career. Naturally an extrovert, Francis soon became a central member of a group of North American and Parisian artists and critics, and enrolled in Fernand Léger’s academy. Struck by the transient light of gloomy Paris skies, the artist found a studio in Paris, and his work shifted soon thereafter. Along with Francis' experience as a pilot in the U.S. Air Force during World War II, the soft gray color of the city was a stimulus for the first paintings he made there, his famous white and gray series; Hydra , 1950, Untitled , circa 1950-52, and Untitled (Circle Entre Noir et Blanc) , 1953-54, all executed in Paris, certainly reflect the palpable influence the city had on him at this time. The myriad of grays in Francis’ work also harks back to the light of the Bay Area, with which Francis was intimately familiar, and recalls the soft gray-whites of Kazimir Malevich’s masterpiece White on White , 1918, which the artist had seen and admired at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Untitled , 1955, showcases Francis’ lifelong preoccupation with color. The artist discovered his genius for high and intense color in California where he was exposed to the colors of seminal artists such as Hans Hofmann Clyfford Still Mark Rothko and Ed Corbett, his teacher at University of California, Berkeley, where he completed his master of arts in 1950. In Untitled , 1955, the dense pattern of interlocking organic for

Auction archive: Lot number 118
Auction:
Datum:
14 Nov 2018
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

Property from the Estate of Howard Karshan Sam Francis Follow Untitled (Circle Entre Noir et Blanc) signed and dated "Sam Francis 1953, Dec." on the reverse ink and watercolor on paper 21 1/2 x 17 in. (54.6 x 43.2 cm.) Executed in 1953-54. This work is identified with the interim identification number of SF54-015 in consideration for the forthcoming Sam Francis Catalogue Raisonné of Unique Works on Paper . This information is subject to change as scholarship continues by the Sam Francis Foundation.
Condition Report Request Condition Report Thank you for your request. The Condition Report will be sent shortly. Contact Us * Required Send me the Report Via Email Fax Contact Specialist Cancel Provenance Paul Jenkins New York Robert Elkon Gallery, New York (?) Minami Gallery, Tokyo (?) Christie's, New York, September 23, 2003, lot 14 Acquired at the above sale by the late owner Exhibited Hanover, Kestner-Gesellschaft, Sam Francis , April 25 - May 28, 1963, no. 31, p. 44 Buffalo, Albright-Knox Art Gallery; Washington, D.C., Corcoran Gallery of Art; New York, Whitney Museum of American Art; Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Sam Francis Paintings 1947-1972 , September 11, 1972 - March 18, 1973, no. 88, p. 108 (illustrated) New York, Robert Elkon Gallery, Sam Francis The Fifties , December 11, 1974 - January 8, 1975 Literature Peter Selz, Sam Francis , New York, 1975, pl. 80, p. 151 (illustrated) Peter Selz, Sam Francis , New York, 1982, pl. 86, p. 163 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay “New York light is hard. Paris light is a beautiful cerulean gray. But Los Angeles light is clear and bright even in haze.” Sam Francis This selection of four masterworks on paper by Sam Francis each executed between 1950-1955 during an important and formative period of the artist’s prolific career, exemplifies key stylistic characteristics that the artist explored throughout his oeuvre. California-born artist Sam Francis’ first important paintings dating to 1947 were all executed on paper, and his devotion to paper as a medium was unwavering from that point forward. Throughout his career, Francis used paper as a medium for pictorial investigations, creating both autonomous works of art and studies for larger paintings. In her review of Francis' exhibition at Martha Jackson Gallery in 1959, Dore Ashton discussed the successful qualities of the artist's watercolors, which are also present in this selection of works: "The floating, the falling (helped by rivulets of color allowed to drop down), the gratuitous meetings in space, the junctures and coincidences which Francis is best equipped to express are endowed with a magic in watercolors that the oils do not possess" (Dore Ashton, quoted in Peter Selz, Sam Francis , New York, 1982, p. 73). In the fall of 1950, Francis moved to Paris from his native California after a brief visit to New York. Francis long considered Paris the “mother city”, having first been exposed to French culture by his own mother, who loved the language and traditions, and the city would come to nurture him at this determinative point in his career. Naturally an extrovert, Francis soon became a central member of a group of North American and Parisian artists and critics, and enrolled in Fernand Léger’s academy. Struck by the transient light of gloomy Paris skies, the artist found a studio in Paris, and his work shifted soon thereafter. Along with Francis' experience as a pilot in the U.S. Air Force during World War II, the soft gray color of the city was a stimulus for the first paintings he made there, his famous white and gray series; Hydra , 1950, Untitled , circa 1950-52, and Untitled (Circle Entre Noir et Blanc) , 1953-54, all executed in Paris, certainly reflect the palpable influence the city had on him at this time. The myriad of grays in Francis’ work also harks back to the light of the Bay Area, with which Francis was intimately familiar, and recalls the soft gray-whites of Kazimir Malevich’s masterpiece White on White , 1918, which the artist had seen and admired at the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Untitled , 1955, showcases Francis’ lifelong preoccupation with color. The artist discovered his genius for high and intense color in California where he was exposed to the colors of seminal artists such as Hans Hofmann Clyfford Still Mark Rothko and Ed Corbett, his teacher at University of California, Berkeley, where he completed his master of arts in 1950. In Untitled , 1955, the dense pattern of interlocking organic for

Auction archive: Lot number 118
Auction:
Datum:
14 Nov 2018
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
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