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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 1

Thomas Schütte

Schätzpreis
300.000 £ - 500.000 £
ca. 383.443 $ - 639.072 $
Zuschlagspreis:
389.000 £
ca. 497.198 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 1

Thomas Schütte

Schätzpreis
300.000 £ - 500.000 £
ca. 383.443 $ - 639.072 $
Zuschlagspreis:
389.000 £
ca. 497.198 $
Beschreibung:

Thomas Schütte Follow Kleiner Geist aluminium 47 x 22.5 x 20 cm (18 1/2 x 8 7/8 x 7 7/8 in.) Executed in 1995, this work is unique.
Provenance Galleria Tucci Russo, Turin Private Collection, Italy Private Collection, Europe Catalogue Essay Playful and reflective, Thomas Schütte’s Kleiner Geist is a fanciful creature celebrating one of the artist’s most favoured and celebrated subjects. Transporting the observer towards the ethereal, the lively spirit is from another realm, the realm of Schütte’s exhaustive and productive imagination. Engaging with form and filled with human expression, the theatrical creature has emerged directly from the stage for which he was created. Forever returning to his beloved subject of ghost-like creatures, the work recalls the spirit of Schütte’s United Enemies , conceived in 1992, and the later Große Geister , 1996. These works, preoccupied with an inhuman essence, explore vast alterations in scale and juxtapose the familiar and individual with the immense. Kleiner Geist does not stem from an abstract idea of realism but rather from experimentations with the possibilities of particular materials and methods of creation. Afforded non-specific helpless gestures, striding forward or pointing to the sky, each has a different stance; the figures are left in a liminal state and are devoid of literary potential. The dialogue between augmented dimensionality and fragility is controlled, with Schütte exploring the co-existence of the mythical and the sinister. Despite his minimal facial features, the spirit does not lack expression. The figure’s stance and subtle features embody the co-existence of humour and despondency. The unnerving yet exuberant figure is human yet otherworldly, exemplary of Thomas Schütte’s playful oeuvre and absolute mastery of materials. Covertly edifying the viewer, the divine creature was conceived following discussions with Richard Deacon concerning ‘scale, monuments, man and animal, man and man, man and light, space and colour and so on…’ (Thomas Schütte in Matthias Winzen, ed., Siemens Kulturprogramm , Ostfildern, 1997, p. 111) whilst planning the collaborative show Them and Us at Lisson Gallery in 1995. Twelve fantastical scenes were presented: Schütte’s dramatic spirits interacted with Deacon’s animal hair sculptures. Examining the constant playful relationship between people and sculptural objects, explicitly separated through the title ‘Them and Us’, scenes of artistic self-reflection emerged; the figures ‘always relate to their surroundings, to the space, to the viewer, to each other’ (ibid). Pairing empty expression with active body language, the artist brings the mythical nature of the spirits to light. In 1973, studying under Fritz Schwegler and Gerhard Richter at the Dusseldorf Academy, Schütte, with his individualistic style, soon became involved in the larger debate surrounding sculpture. Engrossing himself in the legacies of minimalism and conceptualism, in 1992 Schütte explored classical sculpture in Rome, looking to question symbolic artistic customs and explore emotive renderings of the human figure. Occupying Schütte’s creative output between 1995 and 2004, the Kleine Geister were followed by their monumental descendants, the Große Geister which can be found in the permanent collections of prominent museums, such as the Museum of Modern Art Chicago, the Centre Georges Pompidou and the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg. Whimsical and mysterious, Kleiner Geist , with its distinctive stance belongs to a group of 100 definitive works by Thomas Schütte each unique and cast in aluminium or Polyester. Through the manipulation and twisting of malleable wax laces, Schütte created these otherworldly beings. Immersed in harder liquid wax and cast in mirror-finished aluminium, the spirit highlights the artist’s experimentation with methods of creation. Exposed drips of wax, shining from the torso of the creature, afford the spirit a character of its own and demonstrate the artist’s preoccupation with moulding materials intuitively, by ‘thinking with one’s thumbs’ (Thomas Schütte in Matthias Winzen, ed., ‘Collect Y

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 1
Auktion:
Datum:
29.06.2017
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
Beschreibung:

Thomas Schütte Follow Kleiner Geist aluminium 47 x 22.5 x 20 cm (18 1/2 x 8 7/8 x 7 7/8 in.) Executed in 1995, this work is unique.
Provenance Galleria Tucci Russo, Turin Private Collection, Italy Private Collection, Europe Catalogue Essay Playful and reflective, Thomas Schütte’s Kleiner Geist is a fanciful creature celebrating one of the artist’s most favoured and celebrated subjects. Transporting the observer towards the ethereal, the lively spirit is from another realm, the realm of Schütte’s exhaustive and productive imagination. Engaging with form and filled with human expression, the theatrical creature has emerged directly from the stage for which he was created. Forever returning to his beloved subject of ghost-like creatures, the work recalls the spirit of Schütte’s United Enemies , conceived in 1992, and the later Große Geister , 1996. These works, preoccupied with an inhuman essence, explore vast alterations in scale and juxtapose the familiar and individual with the immense. Kleiner Geist does not stem from an abstract idea of realism but rather from experimentations with the possibilities of particular materials and methods of creation. Afforded non-specific helpless gestures, striding forward or pointing to the sky, each has a different stance; the figures are left in a liminal state and are devoid of literary potential. The dialogue between augmented dimensionality and fragility is controlled, with Schütte exploring the co-existence of the mythical and the sinister. Despite his minimal facial features, the spirit does not lack expression. The figure’s stance and subtle features embody the co-existence of humour and despondency. The unnerving yet exuberant figure is human yet otherworldly, exemplary of Thomas Schütte’s playful oeuvre and absolute mastery of materials. Covertly edifying the viewer, the divine creature was conceived following discussions with Richard Deacon concerning ‘scale, monuments, man and animal, man and man, man and light, space and colour and so on…’ (Thomas Schütte in Matthias Winzen, ed., Siemens Kulturprogramm , Ostfildern, 1997, p. 111) whilst planning the collaborative show Them and Us at Lisson Gallery in 1995. Twelve fantastical scenes were presented: Schütte’s dramatic spirits interacted with Deacon’s animal hair sculptures. Examining the constant playful relationship between people and sculptural objects, explicitly separated through the title ‘Them and Us’, scenes of artistic self-reflection emerged; the figures ‘always relate to their surroundings, to the space, to the viewer, to each other’ (ibid). Pairing empty expression with active body language, the artist brings the mythical nature of the spirits to light. In 1973, studying under Fritz Schwegler and Gerhard Richter at the Dusseldorf Academy, Schütte, with his individualistic style, soon became involved in the larger debate surrounding sculpture. Engrossing himself in the legacies of minimalism and conceptualism, in 1992 Schütte explored classical sculpture in Rome, looking to question symbolic artistic customs and explore emotive renderings of the human figure. Occupying Schütte’s creative output between 1995 and 2004, the Kleine Geister were followed by their monumental descendants, the Große Geister which can be found in the permanent collections of prominent museums, such as the Museum of Modern Art Chicago, the Centre Georges Pompidou and the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg. Whimsical and mysterious, Kleiner Geist , with its distinctive stance belongs to a group of 100 definitive works by Thomas Schütte each unique and cast in aluminium or Polyester. Through the manipulation and twisting of malleable wax laces, Schütte created these otherworldly beings. Immersed in harder liquid wax and cast in mirror-finished aluminium, the spirit highlights the artist’s experimentation with methods of creation. Exposed drips of wax, shining from the torso of the creature, afford the spirit a character of its own and demonstrate the artist’s preoccupation with moulding materials intuitively, by ‘thinking with one’s thumbs’ (Thomas Schütte in Matthias Winzen, ed., ‘Collect Y

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 1
Auktion:
Datum:
29.06.2017
Auktionshaus:
Phillips
London
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