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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 45

Louis le Brocquy HRHA (1916-2012

Schätzpreis
1.916 € - 2.012 €
ca. 2.428 $ - 2.549 $
Zuschlagspreis:
40.000 €
ca. 50.690 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 45

Louis le Brocquy HRHA (1916-2012

Schätzpreis
1.916 € - 2.012 €
ca. 2.428 $ - 2.549 $
Zuschlagspreis:
40.000 €
ca. 50.690 $
Beschreibung:

Louis le Brocquy HRHA (1916-2012) C�chulainn Blanc et Rose (1973) Tabard Fr�res et Soeurs Aubusson tapestry, 184 x 184cm (72 x 72'') Signed and numbered 8/9 on the label verso Provenance: Purchased from Taylor Gallery, Dublin, 1977, by John P. Reihill, Deepwell, Blackrock, Co. Dublin The theme of the T�in, the early Irish epic translated by the poet Thomas Kinsella in 1969 and for which le Brocquy was commissioned to provide the accompanying black brush drawings, inspired in the artist a fresh surge of creativity in the realm of tapestry. The word 'T�in' means 'hosting' or gathering of a large crowd for a raid and provided the theme for a number of tapestries designed by the artist. The surface of the tapestry is completely covered in multi-coloured, irregular, oval heads, all with minute irregular 'features' and all facing the spectator. Each head exists as a single entity and does not relate to its neighbour. There is no order, no ranking, yet some inherent, instinctive force holds them together. In 1970 P.J. Carroll and Co. through their architects Scott Tallon Walker commissioned the first T�in tapestry from le Brocquy for the foyer of their Dundalk factory, this is now in the collection of the Irish Museum of Modern Art. Louis le Brocquy has said ''I hope these images from T�in B� C�ailnge, transmuted into the woven forms of tapestry, may be seen as a tribute to the poet Thomas Kinsella, who inspired them and to the devoted publisher and designer, Liam Miller, who gave their original coherence.'' ''In this tapestry I have tried to produce a sort of group or mass emergence of human presence, features uncertain - merely shadowed blobs or patches - but vaguely analogous perhaps in terms of woven colour to be weathered, enduring stone boss-heads of Clonfert or Entremont - or of Dysert O'Dea....'' ''each individual head is conscious only of the viewer vertically facing it. This I think is the secret of their mass regard. Each head is self-contained, finally a lump of presence. No exchange or incident takes place between their multiplied features''. ''All of the T�in tapestries were woven in Aubusson, and in them the artist has contrived a masterly conjunction between the narrative content of the epic, his own and the ancient Celtic concern of the head image and the visual architectural demands of a large modern wall hanging.'' We are indebted to the late Dorothy Walker whose writings formed the basis for this catalogue entry. Louis le Brocquy HRHA (1916-2012) C�chulainn Blanc et Rose (1973) Tabard Fr�res et Soeurs Aubusson tapestry, 184 x 184cm (72 x 72'') Signed and numbered 8/9 on the label verso Provenance: Purchased from Taylor Gallery, Dublin, 1977, by John P. Reihill, Deepwell, Blackrock, Co. Dublin The theme of the T�in, the early Irish epic translated by the poet Thomas Kinsella in 1969 and for which le Brocquy was commissioned to provide the accompanying black brush drawings, inspired in the artist a fresh surge of creativity in the realm of tapestry. The word 'T�in' means 'hosting' or gathering of a large crowd for a raid and provided the theme for a number of tapestries designed by the artist. The surface of the tapestry is completely covered in multi-coloured, irregular, oval heads, all with minute irregular 'features' and all facing the spectator. Each head exists as a single entity and does not relate to its neighbour. There is no order, no ranking, yet some inherent, instinctive force holds them together. In 1970 P.J. Carroll and Co. through their architects Scott Tallon Walker commissioned the first T�in tapestry from le Brocquy for the foyer of their Dundalk factory, this is now in the collection of the Irish Museum of Modern Art. Louis le Brocquy has said ''I hope these images from T�in B� C�ailnge, transmuted into the woven forms of tapestry, may be seen as a tribute to the poet Thomas Kinsella, who inspired them and to the devoted publisher and designer, Liam Miller, who gave their original coherence.''

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 45
Auktion:
Datum:
01.10.2014
Auktionshaus:
Adams's
St Stephens Green 26
D02 X665 Dublin 2
Irland
info@adams.ie
+353-1-6760261)
Beschreibung:

Louis le Brocquy HRHA (1916-2012) C�chulainn Blanc et Rose (1973) Tabard Fr�res et Soeurs Aubusson tapestry, 184 x 184cm (72 x 72'') Signed and numbered 8/9 on the label verso Provenance: Purchased from Taylor Gallery, Dublin, 1977, by John P. Reihill, Deepwell, Blackrock, Co. Dublin The theme of the T�in, the early Irish epic translated by the poet Thomas Kinsella in 1969 and for which le Brocquy was commissioned to provide the accompanying black brush drawings, inspired in the artist a fresh surge of creativity in the realm of tapestry. The word 'T�in' means 'hosting' or gathering of a large crowd for a raid and provided the theme for a number of tapestries designed by the artist. The surface of the tapestry is completely covered in multi-coloured, irregular, oval heads, all with minute irregular 'features' and all facing the spectator. Each head exists as a single entity and does not relate to its neighbour. There is no order, no ranking, yet some inherent, instinctive force holds them together. In 1970 P.J. Carroll and Co. through their architects Scott Tallon Walker commissioned the first T�in tapestry from le Brocquy for the foyer of their Dundalk factory, this is now in the collection of the Irish Museum of Modern Art. Louis le Brocquy has said ''I hope these images from T�in B� C�ailnge, transmuted into the woven forms of tapestry, may be seen as a tribute to the poet Thomas Kinsella, who inspired them and to the devoted publisher and designer, Liam Miller, who gave their original coherence.'' ''In this tapestry I have tried to produce a sort of group or mass emergence of human presence, features uncertain - merely shadowed blobs or patches - but vaguely analogous perhaps in terms of woven colour to be weathered, enduring stone boss-heads of Clonfert or Entremont - or of Dysert O'Dea....'' ''each individual head is conscious only of the viewer vertically facing it. This I think is the secret of their mass regard. Each head is self-contained, finally a lump of presence. No exchange or incident takes place between their multiplied features''. ''All of the T�in tapestries were woven in Aubusson, and in them the artist has contrived a masterly conjunction between the narrative content of the epic, his own and the ancient Celtic concern of the head image and the visual architectural demands of a large modern wall hanging.'' We are indebted to the late Dorothy Walker whose writings formed the basis for this catalogue entry. Louis le Brocquy HRHA (1916-2012) C�chulainn Blanc et Rose (1973) Tabard Fr�res et Soeurs Aubusson tapestry, 184 x 184cm (72 x 72'') Signed and numbered 8/9 on the label verso Provenance: Purchased from Taylor Gallery, Dublin, 1977, by John P. Reihill, Deepwell, Blackrock, Co. Dublin The theme of the T�in, the early Irish epic translated by the poet Thomas Kinsella in 1969 and for which le Brocquy was commissioned to provide the accompanying black brush drawings, inspired in the artist a fresh surge of creativity in the realm of tapestry. The word 'T�in' means 'hosting' or gathering of a large crowd for a raid and provided the theme for a number of tapestries designed by the artist. The surface of the tapestry is completely covered in multi-coloured, irregular, oval heads, all with minute irregular 'features' and all facing the spectator. Each head exists as a single entity and does not relate to its neighbour. There is no order, no ranking, yet some inherent, instinctive force holds them together. In 1970 P.J. Carroll and Co. through their architects Scott Tallon Walker commissioned the first T�in tapestry from le Brocquy for the foyer of their Dundalk factory, this is now in the collection of the Irish Museum of Modern Art. Louis le Brocquy has said ''I hope these images from T�in B� C�ailnge, transmuted into the woven forms of tapestry, may be seen as a tribute to the poet Thomas Kinsella, who inspired them and to the devoted publisher and designer, Liam Miller, who gave their original coherence.''

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 45
Auktion:
Datum:
01.10.2014
Auktionshaus:
Adams's
St Stephens Green 26
D02 X665 Dublin 2
Irland
info@adams.ie
+353-1-6760261)
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