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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11

Christopher Wool

Schätzpreis
1.000.000 $ - 1.500.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
1.685.000 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11

Christopher Wool

Schätzpreis
1.000.000 $ - 1.500.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
1.685.000 $
Beschreibung:

Christopher Wool Untitled 1999 enamel on canvas 90 x 60 in. (229 x 152.5 cm.) Signed, titled and dated "WOOL 1999 Untitled (P295)" on the reverse; further signed, titled and dated" WOOL 1999 P295" along the overlap.
Provenance Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York Private Collection Catalogue Essay “Publicly I would probably insist on labeling the work abstract...but for me they are ‘pictures’ with all that that implies...” CHRISTOPHER WOOL 2007 Demonstrating many of the recognizable themes and motifs that have occupied the artist for the last number of decades, Untitled, 1999, presents us with Christopher Wool’s signature process and skillful technique. Untitled is an exemplar of a significant body of work in which Wool has overlapped found ornamental forms into a chaotic dissonance of symbols, patterns, and expressive gestures. This cacophony of black crosses, noughts, hash-tags, and spots scrawled over the white canvas creates a controlled yet impulsive overall effect for which the artist is so highly acclaimed. Wool’s impressive contribution spans several mediums including paper, photography and painting, as he has examined the expansive qualities of a seemingly stark black and white aesthetic. Wool began improvising his stand out style during the mid 1970s with the development of abstract paintings which were engaged in all over process that inquired into the nature of what constitutes painterly execution. With these works, Wool sought to define such paintings by the elimination of everything that seemed superfluous, thus denying color, hierarchical composition, and internal form. Wool’s paintings are as much defined by their purposeful exclusions as their inclusions, as the artist has stated, “You take color out, you take gesture out - and then later you can put them in. But it’s easier to define things by what they’re not than by what they are.” Throughout the 1980s Wool’s emphasis on this radical reduction expanded as he continued to create paintings that steered away from precise subject matter and representational form. Eventually, he started to incorporate new printmaking techniques such as patterned rubber paint rollers, rubber stamps, stencils, and silk screening. Wool began a creative association with domestic patterning with a series of work utilizing decorator’s rollers originally designed for printing wallpaper patterns. Untitled, 1999, represents a body of work where Wool enlarged of-the-shelf patterns, and reintroduced the prosaic shapes in a startlingly new context. He was then able to gain control of the scale and overall composition by using silk screens to expand the original design and then allowing the screens to layer the patterns over one another, varying their states of legibility throughout the canvas. These variations in weight across the surface offer moments of both assurance and hesitancy. The tension and friction between mark and erasure, gesture and removal, is the product of Wool’s evolution in the contingency of the processes inherent in making images. While Wool’s paintings have developed into a class of their own, the method of silk screening recalls Andy Warhol’s legendary Pop Art output. Wool adopted Warhol’s practice of reproducing systems of mass production and his appropriation of readymade imagery. Additionally, the use of a repetitious decorative pattern is reminiscent to Warhol’s use of repeating motifs, and in the present lot, Wool even divides the canvas into four quadrants, similar to Warhol’s iconic technique of displaying recurring images on the same canvas, as seen in his stunning Marilyns or Disaster Series. Wool intentionally selects his patterns based on their commonplace banality, which encourages viewers to focus on the artistic process rather than an overtly defined meaning within. This emphasis on process rather than representation extends beyond the boundaries of Warhol’s Pop silk screens though, and crosses over into the realm of Abstract Expressionism. While Wool did create successful drip paintings earlier in his career, his decorative rollers and silk screens, although repetitive in nature, continue to operate like the drip paintings as allover compositions. Clearly there are

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11
Auktion:
Datum:
16.05.2013
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

Christopher Wool Untitled 1999 enamel on canvas 90 x 60 in. (229 x 152.5 cm.) Signed, titled and dated "WOOL 1999 Untitled (P295)" on the reverse; further signed, titled and dated" WOOL 1999 P295" along the overlap.
Provenance Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York Private Collection Catalogue Essay “Publicly I would probably insist on labeling the work abstract...but for me they are ‘pictures’ with all that that implies...” CHRISTOPHER WOOL 2007 Demonstrating many of the recognizable themes and motifs that have occupied the artist for the last number of decades, Untitled, 1999, presents us with Christopher Wool’s signature process and skillful technique. Untitled is an exemplar of a significant body of work in which Wool has overlapped found ornamental forms into a chaotic dissonance of symbols, patterns, and expressive gestures. This cacophony of black crosses, noughts, hash-tags, and spots scrawled over the white canvas creates a controlled yet impulsive overall effect for which the artist is so highly acclaimed. Wool’s impressive contribution spans several mediums including paper, photography and painting, as he has examined the expansive qualities of a seemingly stark black and white aesthetic. Wool began improvising his stand out style during the mid 1970s with the development of abstract paintings which were engaged in all over process that inquired into the nature of what constitutes painterly execution. With these works, Wool sought to define such paintings by the elimination of everything that seemed superfluous, thus denying color, hierarchical composition, and internal form. Wool’s paintings are as much defined by their purposeful exclusions as their inclusions, as the artist has stated, “You take color out, you take gesture out - and then later you can put them in. But it’s easier to define things by what they’re not than by what they are.” Throughout the 1980s Wool’s emphasis on this radical reduction expanded as he continued to create paintings that steered away from precise subject matter and representational form. Eventually, he started to incorporate new printmaking techniques such as patterned rubber paint rollers, rubber stamps, stencils, and silk screening. Wool began a creative association with domestic patterning with a series of work utilizing decorator’s rollers originally designed for printing wallpaper patterns. Untitled, 1999, represents a body of work where Wool enlarged of-the-shelf patterns, and reintroduced the prosaic shapes in a startlingly new context. He was then able to gain control of the scale and overall composition by using silk screens to expand the original design and then allowing the screens to layer the patterns over one another, varying their states of legibility throughout the canvas. These variations in weight across the surface offer moments of both assurance and hesitancy. The tension and friction between mark and erasure, gesture and removal, is the product of Wool’s evolution in the contingency of the processes inherent in making images. While Wool’s paintings have developed into a class of their own, the method of silk screening recalls Andy Warhol’s legendary Pop Art output. Wool adopted Warhol’s practice of reproducing systems of mass production and his appropriation of readymade imagery. Additionally, the use of a repetitious decorative pattern is reminiscent to Warhol’s use of repeating motifs, and in the present lot, Wool even divides the canvas into four quadrants, similar to Warhol’s iconic technique of displaying recurring images on the same canvas, as seen in his stunning Marilyns or Disaster Series. Wool intentionally selects his patterns based on their commonplace banality, which encourages viewers to focus on the artistic process rather than an overtly defined meaning within. This emphasis on process rather than representation extends beyond the boundaries of Warhol’s Pop silk screens though, and crosses over into the realm of Abstract Expressionism. While Wool did create successful drip paintings earlier in his career, his decorative rollers and silk screens, although repetitive in nature, continue to operate like the drip paintings as allover compositions. Clearly there are

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11
Auktion:
Datum:
16.05.2013
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
New York
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