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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 683

PAMELA BONE (1925-2021), Five Creative Colour Landscapes

The Collectors Sale
04.01.2023 - 05.01.2023
Schätzpreis
50 £ - 100 £
ca. 60 $ - 120 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 683

PAMELA BONE (1925-2021), Five Creative Colour Landscapes

The Collectors Sale
04.01.2023 - 05.01.2023
Schätzpreis
50 £ - 100 £
ca. 60 $ - 120 $
Zuschlagspreis:
n. a.
Beschreibung:

printed c.2000-2006, five colour photographs, Cibachrome prints, each a manipulated image, some or all these prints are from multiple superimposed negatives, four signed in ink on the image, all with photographer's hand written notes taped verso regarding the images and framing, images approximately 31cm x 30cm, in glazed frames largest 54cm x 51cm
Note: These photographs were selected by Pamela Bone and were displayed together at her in residence in Dorking, Surrey. Some frames appear to be reused and may have an earlier image concealed.
Note: Pamela Bone (Lady Pamela Goodale) Pamela Bone (British, 1925-2021) created a significant body of experimental photographic works between 1952 and 1992. Though some of her works were published and exhibited in her lifetime – and she collaborated with notable figures in the world of film, conceptual art and electronic music during the 1970s – this innovative work is now being re-assessed and appreciated. At her death Bone bequeathed her photographic works to the Victoria and Albert Museum. Martin Barnes, Senior Curator, Photography, at the V&A oversaw the accession of this collection. Pamela Bone’s estate included some multiples and small editions of some of her works, these have been released for sale by auction at Flints. Please note that purchasers acquire the original physical print or artwork, where an image is also held in the V&A’s collection, the V&A holds copyright to reproduction of that image.
Martin Barnes has summarised Pamela Bone’s career and work:
“Bone attended Guildford School of Art between 1952-54, creating black and white still-lifes and portraiture alongside colour work. In 1953, she also studied in Paris with advertising and portrait photographer André Thevenet and worked in advertising. Her photographs were published in Photomonde, Vogue, Queen and House and Garden magazines. In 1958, she went to stay with a student friend in Calcutta and from there travelled throughout the following year in India, Sikkim and Kashmir. On returning to the UK, she abandoned commercial photography and focussed on independent art practice. She photographed in North Uist, Outer Hebrides and around Dartmoor, for her Dartmoor Trees and River series. She also studied sound recording.
From 1965 Bone began experimenting with a conceptual slide show of her transparencies, based around the themes of her travels, the seasons and children, still life and landscape. She applied this approach in her printing methods, which combined and overlayed transparencies and prints from different periods with photograms to create dreamlike, textured impressions of imagined landscapes. This culminated in Circle of Light, (1972) an experimental film created from transparencies by Bone collaborating with filmmaker Anthony Roland, video art and installation artist Elsa Stansfield (1945-2004) and composer Delia Derbyshire (1937-2001) of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop (and who famously recorded the Doctor Who theme tune). A VHS copy of Circle of Light is in the V&A National Art Library (NAL). Bone’s approach to collaging and recombining works became her main approach and is a pre-cursor to contemporary practices of sampling.
In 1973, she married Sir Ernest William Goodale, becoming Lady Pamela Goodale, but she continued to sign her artworks with her maiden-name. Bone was a lifelong follower of Christian Science. There were many books by the movement’s founder, the religious leader and author Mary Baker Eddy (1821- 1910) in her library. Bone was shy and reclusive and worked largely in seclusion. She set up a Cibachrome colour processing darkroom in 1981 in an outbuilding at her home in Dorking. This process allowed her to make her own direct colour positive prints from her colour transparencies. She made use of ‘lith’ printing as overlay masking for her cibachromes, and also produced pictures using silks. An exhibition of cibachrome prints, Let There Be Light was shown at West Dean College in 1991. Bone ceased printing in 1992 but began meticulously preserving her works. Towards the end of her life, she produced two limited-edition, hand-printed publications of her photographs, Wings of the Wind (2000) and Seven Doors: Finding Freedom of Expression Through Photography (2009) both in the NAL”

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 683
Auktion:
Datum:
04.01.2023 - 05.01.2023
Auktionshaus:
Flints Auctions Ltd.
8 Rivermead
Pipers Way
Thatcham, RG19 4EP
Großbritannien und Nordirland
info@flintsauctions.com
+44 (0)1635 873 634
Beschreibung:

printed c.2000-2006, five colour photographs, Cibachrome prints, each a manipulated image, some or all these prints are from multiple superimposed negatives, four signed in ink on the image, all with photographer's hand written notes taped verso regarding the images and framing, images approximately 31cm x 30cm, in glazed frames largest 54cm x 51cm
Note: These photographs were selected by Pamela Bone and were displayed together at her in residence in Dorking, Surrey. Some frames appear to be reused and may have an earlier image concealed.
Note: Pamela Bone (Lady Pamela Goodale) Pamela Bone (British, 1925-2021) created a significant body of experimental photographic works between 1952 and 1992. Though some of her works were published and exhibited in her lifetime – and she collaborated with notable figures in the world of film, conceptual art and electronic music during the 1970s – this innovative work is now being re-assessed and appreciated. At her death Bone bequeathed her photographic works to the Victoria and Albert Museum. Martin Barnes, Senior Curator, Photography, at the V&A oversaw the accession of this collection. Pamela Bone’s estate included some multiples and small editions of some of her works, these have been released for sale by auction at Flints. Please note that purchasers acquire the original physical print or artwork, where an image is also held in the V&A’s collection, the V&A holds copyright to reproduction of that image.
Martin Barnes has summarised Pamela Bone’s career and work:
“Bone attended Guildford School of Art between 1952-54, creating black and white still-lifes and portraiture alongside colour work. In 1953, she also studied in Paris with advertising and portrait photographer André Thevenet and worked in advertising. Her photographs were published in Photomonde, Vogue, Queen and House and Garden magazines. In 1958, she went to stay with a student friend in Calcutta and from there travelled throughout the following year in India, Sikkim and Kashmir. On returning to the UK, she abandoned commercial photography and focussed on independent art practice. She photographed in North Uist, Outer Hebrides and around Dartmoor, for her Dartmoor Trees and River series. She also studied sound recording.
From 1965 Bone began experimenting with a conceptual slide show of her transparencies, based around the themes of her travels, the seasons and children, still life and landscape. She applied this approach in her printing methods, which combined and overlayed transparencies and prints from different periods with photograms to create dreamlike, textured impressions of imagined landscapes. This culminated in Circle of Light, (1972) an experimental film created from transparencies by Bone collaborating with filmmaker Anthony Roland, video art and installation artist Elsa Stansfield (1945-2004) and composer Delia Derbyshire (1937-2001) of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop (and who famously recorded the Doctor Who theme tune). A VHS copy of Circle of Light is in the V&A National Art Library (NAL). Bone’s approach to collaging and recombining works became her main approach and is a pre-cursor to contemporary practices of sampling.
In 1973, she married Sir Ernest William Goodale, becoming Lady Pamela Goodale, but she continued to sign her artworks with her maiden-name. Bone was a lifelong follower of Christian Science. There were many books by the movement’s founder, the religious leader and author Mary Baker Eddy (1821- 1910) in her library. Bone was shy and reclusive and worked largely in seclusion. She set up a Cibachrome colour processing darkroom in 1981 in an outbuilding at her home in Dorking. This process allowed her to make her own direct colour positive prints from her colour transparencies. She made use of ‘lith’ printing as overlay masking for her cibachromes, and also produced pictures using silks. An exhibition of cibachrome prints, Let There Be Light was shown at West Dean College in 1991. Bone ceased printing in 1992 but began meticulously preserving her works. Towards the end of her life, she produced two limited-edition, hand-printed publications of her photographs, Wings of the Wind (2000) and Seven Doors: Finding Freedom of Expression Through Photography (2009) both in the NAL”

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 683
Auktion:
Datum:
04.01.2023 - 05.01.2023
Auktionshaus:
Flints Auctions Ltd.
8 Rivermead
Pipers Way
Thatcham, RG19 4EP
Großbritannien und Nordirland
info@flintsauctions.com
+44 (0)1635 873 634
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