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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 22

Cy Twombly

Schätzpreis
450.000 £ - 650.000 £
ca. 586.284 $ - 846.855 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 22

Cy Twombly

Schätzpreis
450.000 £ - 650.000 £
ca. 586.284 $ - 846.855 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

Cy Twombly Follow Dithyrambus signed with the artist's initials and dated 'CT76' lower right of right sheet; titled '"DITHYRAMBUS"' upper centre of left sheet; further inscribed 'DIONYSUS' upper right of left sheet collage (drawing paper, handmade paper, staples, transparent adhesive tape), oil paint, watercolour, wax crayon and pencil left sheet 125.5 x 69.5 cm (49 3/8 x 27 3/8 in.) right sheet 100 x 70 cm (39 3/8 x 27 1/2 in.) Executed in 1976.
Provenance Galleria Sperone, Rome Heiner Friedrich Gallery, New York The Dia Art Foundation Inc., New York Private Collection, New York Exhibited Rome, Galleria Sperone, Cy Twombly , 23 November - 17 December 1976 Literature Yvon Lambert, Cy Twombly Catalogue raisonné des oeuvres sur papier, vol. VI, 1973 - 1976 , Milan, 1979, no. 189, p. 177 (illustrated) Nicola Del Roscio, Cy Twombly Drawings. Catalogue Raisonne. vol. VI, 1972-1979, Munich, 2016, cat.no. 212, p. 202 Catalogue Essay Cy Twombly’s Dithyrambus, executed in 1976, is comprised of two works on paper, merging collage, watercolour, paint and pencil in his visually rich and layered surfaces. Produced just three years before the American artist’s second-ever retrospective at the Whitney Museum of Art and previously housed in the Dia Art Foundation collection, the present work combines a number of Twombly’s most celebrated tropes, namely his exploration of syntax, Ancient Greek mythology and mark making. Stylistically, Dithyrambus aligns perfectly with the visual language Twombly developed over the course of fifty years. It features loose handwriting, scrappy scribbles and other materials on an organic, sheet coloured backdrop: a hodgepodge of idiosyncratic details very much emblematic of the artist’s practice. The word ‘Dithyrambus’, hesitantly outlined and generously spanning across the top part of the left collage furthermore imbues the eponymous work with a distinctively Twomblian inflection. As one of the many materialisations of the artist’s fascination with Greek mythology, Dithyrambus invokes a joyful hymn sung in ancient times to the Greek God Dionysus, bearer of wine and fertility. Informed by his move from New York to Rome in 1957, Twombly ceaselessly nurtured his passion for divine narratives and Greek Antiquity. Observing the significant impact of Greek culture in most of Europe’s literary, sculptural and architectural canons, the artist began materialising his observations and examinations on paper. On the subject, Twombly famously proclaimed: ‘For myself the past is the source (for all art is vitally contemporary)’ ( Cy Twombly , Paris, January 1952, p. 13). Not so much looking back as attempting to include past narratives in an ever-contemporary present, Twombly thus placed his work in a temporal shell of their own, disaffecting them from the rigidity of linear structure. After having visited Greece in 1960, references to mythology became all the more explicit in the American artist’s paintings, developing namely in monumental projects like Fifty Days at Iliam, completed just two years after Dithyrambus . Deploying Homer’s Iliad over ten large canvases, Twombly’s 1978 series epically transcribed the impossibly complex classic, one scribble and erasure at a time. In this sense, Twombly’s calligraphic gestures themselves may be interpreted narratorially; they rhythmically mirror the meaning of the words and expressions adorning them through energetic movement. The artist’s idiosyncratic handwriting is indeed a signature trait in itself: its tentative appearance and shy demeanour reveal the essential mechanisms of pencilwork while simultaneously allowing for allegorical stories to unroll. Though often counterbalanced by the blazing energy in his works, Twombly’s signature scrawls indeed retain a candid tone of timidity and solemnity. On the American artist’s approach to pencil calligraphy, French philosopher Roland Barthes expressed: 'One might think that in order to express the character of the pencil, one has to press it against the paper to reinforce its appearance, to make it thick, intensely black. Twombly thinks the opposite: it is in holding in check the pressure of matter, in letting it alight almost nonchalantly on the paper so that its grain is a little dispersed, that matter will show its essence and make us certain of its correct name: this is pencil' (Roland Barthes, Cy Twombly Paintings and Drawings 1954-1977 , Whitney Museum of Art, New Yor

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 22
Auktion:
Datum:
05.10.2018
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

Cy Twombly Follow Dithyrambus signed with the artist's initials and dated 'CT76' lower right of right sheet; titled '"DITHYRAMBUS"' upper centre of left sheet; further inscribed 'DIONYSUS' upper right of left sheet collage (drawing paper, handmade paper, staples, transparent adhesive tape), oil paint, watercolour, wax crayon and pencil left sheet 125.5 x 69.5 cm (49 3/8 x 27 3/8 in.) right sheet 100 x 70 cm (39 3/8 x 27 1/2 in.) Executed in 1976.
Provenance Galleria Sperone, Rome Heiner Friedrich Gallery, New York The Dia Art Foundation Inc., New York Private Collection, New York Exhibited Rome, Galleria Sperone, Cy Twombly , 23 November - 17 December 1976 Literature Yvon Lambert, Cy Twombly Catalogue raisonné des oeuvres sur papier, vol. VI, 1973 - 1976 , Milan, 1979, no. 189, p. 177 (illustrated) Nicola Del Roscio, Cy Twombly Drawings. Catalogue Raisonne. vol. VI, 1972-1979, Munich, 2016, cat.no. 212, p. 202 Catalogue Essay Cy Twombly’s Dithyrambus, executed in 1976, is comprised of two works on paper, merging collage, watercolour, paint and pencil in his visually rich and layered surfaces. Produced just three years before the American artist’s second-ever retrospective at the Whitney Museum of Art and previously housed in the Dia Art Foundation collection, the present work combines a number of Twombly’s most celebrated tropes, namely his exploration of syntax, Ancient Greek mythology and mark making. Stylistically, Dithyrambus aligns perfectly with the visual language Twombly developed over the course of fifty years. It features loose handwriting, scrappy scribbles and other materials on an organic, sheet coloured backdrop: a hodgepodge of idiosyncratic details very much emblematic of the artist’s practice. The word ‘Dithyrambus’, hesitantly outlined and generously spanning across the top part of the left collage furthermore imbues the eponymous work with a distinctively Twomblian inflection. As one of the many materialisations of the artist’s fascination with Greek mythology, Dithyrambus invokes a joyful hymn sung in ancient times to the Greek God Dionysus, bearer of wine and fertility. Informed by his move from New York to Rome in 1957, Twombly ceaselessly nurtured his passion for divine narratives and Greek Antiquity. Observing the significant impact of Greek culture in most of Europe’s literary, sculptural and architectural canons, the artist began materialising his observations and examinations on paper. On the subject, Twombly famously proclaimed: ‘For myself the past is the source (for all art is vitally contemporary)’ ( Cy Twombly , Paris, January 1952, p. 13). Not so much looking back as attempting to include past narratives in an ever-contemporary present, Twombly thus placed his work in a temporal shell of their own, disaffecting them from the rigidity of linear structure. After having visited Greece in 1960, references to mythology became all the more explicit in the American artist’s paintings, developing namely in monumental projects like Fifty Days at Iliam, completed just two years after Dithyrambus . Deploying Homer’s Iliad over ten large canvases, Twombly’s 1978 series epically transcribed the impossibly complex classic, one scribble and erasure at a time. In this sense, Twombly’s calligraphic gestures themselves may be interpreted narratorially; they rhythmically mirror the meaning of the words and expressions adorning them through energetic movement. The artist’s idiosyncratic handwriting is indeed a signature trait in itself: its tentative appearance and shy demeanour reveal the essential mechanisms of pencilwork while simultaneously allowing for allegorical stories to unroll. Though often counterbalanced by the blazing energy in his works, Twombly’s signature scrawls indeed retain a candid tone of timidity and solemnity. On the American artist’s approach to pencil calligraphy, French philosopher Roland Barthes expressed: 'One might think that in order to express the character of the pencil, one has to press it against the paper to reinforce its appearance, to make it thick, intensely black. Twombly thinks the opposite: it is in holding in check the pressure of matter, in letting it alight almost nonchalantly on the paper so that its grain is a little dispersed, that matter will show its essence and make us certain of its correct name: this is pencil' (Roland Barthes, Cy Twombly Paintings and Drawings 1954-1977 , Whitney Museum of Art, New Yor

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 22
Auktion:
Datum:
05.10.2018
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
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