7. Heinz Mack,当代艺术I 高清作品[52%]

DO-Heinz Mack  - 现代艺术 I
图片文件像素:4698 x 4418 px

Heinz Mack,当代艺术I-

Heinz Mack * - Zeitgenössische Kunst I-

(born in Lollar, Hessen 1931)
Wing relief, 1989, signed, dated Mack 89, on the reverse again signed, dated, inscribed and with directional arrow, relief of aluminum grid, board and mirror, 81.5 x 101.5 cm, framed

Certificate:
Atelier Mack, Mönchengladbach, signed by the artist

Provenance:
Private Collection, Rhineland Palatinate
Private Collection, North Rhine-Westphalia - acquired from the above in 2006
Private Collection, Venice
Ketterer Kunst, Munich, 5 December 2006, lot 335

Literature:
Exhibition catalogue Galerie Ludorff, Düsseldorf 2020, p. 88

The Zero artist Heinz Mack discovered the effect of light on a piece of aluminium foil by accident. When he stepped on a piece of the foil lying on the floor, he created a carpet of light, a light reflector with the embossed pattern of his sisal carpet. This showed him how the light from the aluminium foil refracts and at the same time reflects the embossed pattern of the carpet. From then on, the effect of light in his works played a decisive role for Heinz Mack in the conception of his art. The character of the reliefs is that they capture the light and at the same time return it to the room.

The work offered here is from the series of so-called ‘wing reliefs’ (Flügelreliefs). Here Mack - unlike in his painting - does not experiment with colour, but with material and form, with the reflection and location of the viewer in the work. Mack uses a fine-meshed flexible expanded metal aluminium fabric for his wing reliefs, originally created for the aerospace industry. Its technical materiality allow the metal mesh to be given soft contours and to form varied patterns from the individual honeycombs. The artistic intention of making light, structure and movement visible is accentuated in a special way in the wing reliefs by the fine structure of the honeycomb fabric.

The structure of the relief allows the viewer to experience the refraction of light from different angles anew each time. The light refracts in the depths of the honeycombs and captivates the viewer.

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8. 马格努斯·普莱森,当代艺术I 高清作品[49%]

DO-Magnus Plessen  - 现代艺术 I
图片文件像素:5844 x 5142 px

马格努斯·普莱森,当代艺术I-

Magnus Plessen * - Zeitgenössische Kunst I-

(born in Hamburg 1967)
Untitled, 2009, signed, dated, titled on the overlap Plessen 2009, oil on canvas, 117 x 89 cm, on stretcher

Provenance:
Mai 36 Galerie, Zurich (gallery label)
Private collection, 德国y - acquired from the above

Literature:
Uta Grosenick and Daniel Marzona (Eds.): Magnus Plessen. Die Augen in der Hand. Malerei 1999-2009. 100 Bilder, Cologne 2009, cat.-no. 93, with full page color illustration on p. 47

From a background as a photographer and filmmaker, Magnus Plessen has turned himself into one of the most well-known painters of our time. His unique composition technique and reduced visual language as well as the broad stroke of his palette knife lets his artworks play along the boundary of the abstract and the figurative. The characteristics of Plessen’s paintings lie in their systematic development of an image, constructed by adding and removing sections of paint to reveal passages of compact form and negative space. The artist uses the idea of rotation as a means of reordering structure and dimensionality within the painting.

“It’s literally moving away from you. The relationship of the viewer to the painting and the attempt to achieve some kind of loosening is something that physically takes place in my mind but is also an action in the process of making.” (ibid.)

The artwork being auctioned here resembles this situation. Uncoordinated objects and colour fields seem to float through the canvas. As a viewer you recognize some familiar objects such as the hand or the cable and are able use them as fixed points to create your own first-hand impression of the artwork.

“I don’t want to link painting back to the reality that we know. I would like to link it to an unknown place. So, what could that place look like? It’s light, it’s colour, it’s different forces that hold the objects which are readily recognisable in my paintings together. Hold them in place, in position, give them a place. I normally tend to bring the same objects or body parts to the canvas, e.g. hands, feet or fruit. I think it’s important to bring these familiar things that I deploy onto the empty canvas. I think you need something familiar in an unfamiliar place. It just makes it so much easier to move and find your way through that space.”
(Magnus Plessen on the exhibition: Riding the Image, White Cube, Mason’s Yard, 14.9.-10.11.2012)

From a background as a photographer and filmmaker, Magnus Plessen has turned himself into one of the most well-known painters of our time. His unique composition technique and reduced visual language as well as the broad stroke of his palette knife lets his artworks play along the boundary of the abstract and the figurative. The characteristics of Plessen’s paintings lie in their systematic development of an image, constructed by adding and removing sections of paint to reveal passages of compact form and negative space. The artist uses the idea of rotation as a means of reordering structure and dimensionality within the painting.

“It’s literally moving away from you. The relationship of the viewer to the painting and the attempt to achieve some kind of loosening is something that physically takes place in my mind but is also an action in the process of making.” (ibid.)
The artwork being auctioned here resembles this situation. Uncoordinated objects and colour fields seem to float through the canvas. As a viewer you recognize some familiar objects such as the hand or the cable and are able use them as fixed points to create your own first-hand impression of the artwork.

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10. 山川树浩(1898-1944) 站立的美丽昭和时代 高清作品[41%]

A standing beautyShowa era

图片文件尺寸 : 4803 x 4156px

YAMAKAWA SHUHO (1898-1944):A standing beauty
Showa era (1926-1989)
The hanging scroll in ink, colors, and gold on silk, the beauty dressed in a horizontally striped and pattered kimono with her back to the viewer, showing off her elaborately tied obi sash, stands below a branch of flowering cherry blossoms, and holds another branch in her hands, while dandelions bloom around her feet, signed Shuho and sealed Shuho
With wood tomobako storage box and cardboard box sleeve
45 1/2 x 12 1/4in (115.6 x 31.1cm)

山川树浩(1898-1944) 站立的美丽昭和时代

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11. 丹尼尔·里希特,当代艺术I 高清作品[30%]

DO-Daniel Richter  - 现代艺术 I
图片文件像素:5412 x 4936 px

丹尼尔·里希特,当代艺术I-

Daniel Richter * - Zeitgenössische Kunst I-

(born in Lütjenburg in 1962)
Jump from the towers, 2009, signed, dated Daniel Richter 09 on the reverse, oil on canvas, 60 x 50 cm, framed

Provenance:
Private Collection, North Rhine-Westphalia

Daniel Richter is one of 德国y\'s best-known contemporary artists. In a constant balancing act between his left-wing political origins as a squatter in Hamburg and his new lifestyle as a 德国 star painter, Richter uses iconographic representations from art history, mass media and pop culture in his works. He places these as if on a stage onto a reduced, mystical pictorial background often characterised by darkness, depicting the figures themselves in a painterly excess of light and colour.

This pictorial composition is typical of Richter and can also be found in his stage designs for the 2010 Salzburg Festival.

In Jump from the towers, it seems as if the figures are jumping out of the screen with wide-open eyes, as if in panic, in reference to the images of the 9/11 terrorist attack circulating in the media. Their bodies dissolve into streaks and splashes of colour as they move, and their colourfulness is reminiscent of the view through a thermal imaging camera. This connotation fits Richter\'s recurring theme of the total surveillance of society. The figures\' leap into the unknown triggers fascination and at the same time nervousness in the viewer.

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12. 各种艺术家 彼得·诺顿圣诞艺术项目 高清作品[27%]

Peter Norton Christmas Art Projects

图片文件尺寸 : 5462 x 4991px

Various Artists:Peter Norton Christmas Art Projects, 1989-2017
A group of 27 multiples in various media, from the editions of 2500-5000, published by the Peter Norton Family Christmas Project, Santa Monica, California. (27)

Artists, titles and dates include:
Untitled (Stereoscopic Slide Viewer), Mitchell Syrop, 1989; Untitled (Four Napkins), May Sun, 1990; Untitled (Stars Don\'t Stand Still in the Sky for Anybody pin), Lawrence Weiner, 1991; Untitled (NO IT CAN ASSESS AN ACTION wall template, Fred Fehlau, 1992 (2); Untitled (Miniature Book), Luciano Perna, 1993; III (Three Wishbones in a Wood Box), Lorna Simpson, 1994; Aimai-no-bi (Ambiguous Beauty), Yasumasa Morimura, 1995; Oblique Strategies, Brian Eno/Pae White, 1996; Freedom, a Fable: A Curious Interpretation of the Wit of a Negress in Troubled Times, Kara Walker, 1997; Untitled (Double-sided Blanket), Jim Hodges, 1998; Untitled (Peep Show), Anna Gaskell, 2001; Untitled (Dollhouse), Yinka Shonibare, 2002; Teacup, Robert Lazzarini, 2003; Untitled (Glass Bowl), Do Ho Suh, 2004; Untitled (Music Box), Christian Marclay, 2005; Untitled (Spiral, Pop-up Photo Album), Peter Coffin, 2006; Salt and Pepper Shaker, Nina Katchadourian, 2007; Cheshire Smile, Sanford Biggers, 2008; Untitled (Sequined Antler), Marc Swanson, 2009; Ikebana Kit, Escher GuneWardena Architecture, 2012; Trophy Modern, Ry Rocklen, 2013; Once Again, But Different This Time: The Canasta Edition, Kevin Sommers, 2014; Lazerian et al. Gerald the Dog, 2015; This is the End, 2017; Untitled (Holiday Card Portrait), Catherine Opie, n.d.; Currency, Brenna Youngblood, 2006 (signed in pencil, titled, dated and numbered 156/200 verso)
various sizes

各种艺术家 彼得·诺顿圣诞艺术项目

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13. 卢西奥·丰塔纳,当代艺术I 高清作品[22%]

DO-Lucio Fontana  - 现代艺术 I
图片文件像素:5704 x 5632 px

卢西奥·丰塔纳,当代艺术I-

Lucio Fontana * - Zeitgenössische Kunst I-

(Rosario di Santa Fe, Argentina 1899–1968 Comabbio)
Concetto Spaziale, 1965, signed; signed and titled on the reverse, oil, tearing and scratching on canvas, pink, 92 x 73 cm, framed

This work is registered in the Fondazione Lucio Fontana, Milan and is accompanied by a photo certificate of authenticity

Provenance:
Galleria Arte Borgogna, Milan
European Private Collection

Literature:
E. Crispolti, Lucio Fontana: Catalogue Raisonné des Peintures, Sculptures et Environnements Spatiaux, vol. II, Brussels 1974, pp. 142, 143 with ill.
E. Crispolti, Lucio Fontana: Catalogo Generale, vol. II, Milan 1986, p. 487 with full-page ill., p. 488 no. 65 O 2 with ill.
E. Crispolti, Catalogo ragionato di sculture, dipinti e ambientazioni, vol. II, Milan 2006, p. 680, no. 65 O 2 with ill.

Lucio Fontana\'s first perforated canvases were created in 1949, and a decade later the artist began to work on his famous cuts through the canvas. Holes and cuts, buchi and tagli, became variations on Fontana\'s fundamental concept. The \"Olii\", on which Fontana worked intensively from the early 1960s, are also dominated by deep punctures and scratches.

With the radical gesture of piercing, the flat surface of the image is broken. The light falls through the openings, creating a new spatiality and depth. In this way, Fontana crosses a boundary that opens a new dimension and thus a new freedom for art - a revolutionary path in art history.

Accordingly, Fontana names his works \"Concetti Spaziali\" - spatial concepts: \"A hole is the beginning of a sculpture in space. My works are not pictures, but art concepts.\" Fontana allows the art genres - architecture, painting, sculpture - to merge into one another. In his Concetti Spaziali, real and imagined space combine; the view into the hole challenges the viewer\'s imagination. At the same time, the material character of the canvas or object is made tangible by piercing and cutting through it.

Fontana\'s \"Olii\" of the 1960s, as well as his metal works which were created during the same period, bear witness to the artist\'s sensual relationship to the material. He was fascinated by the texture of the malleable, slightly plastic oil paint, which is particularly well-suited to making visible gestures of scoring, piercing, or cutting. Fontana plays with the possibilities of handling canvas, paint, metal, glass or even light: the artistic gesture develops on the material and brings its potential to life.

\"The hole is my invention, that is all there is to it.
After this invention, I can die.\"
Lucio Fontana

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