
Untitled Composition, 1952
29 cms (11.42 ins)
Signed and dated -52 incised in the canvas lower right
made in 1952
Lot offered for sale by Waddington's, Toronto at the auction event "International Modern and Contemporary Art" held on Thu, Nov 28, 2019.
Lot 218
Lot 218
Estimate: CAD $200,000 - $300,000
Sale price withheld by the Auction house
Sale price withheld by the Auction house
Lot description - from the online catalogue*
Provenance:
Antonio Barrozo, Filho Ltd., Rio de Janeiro stamp to the stretcher;
The Estate of Joan Constance Hunt, Toronto
Literature:
Cornelia H. Butler & Luis Perez-Oramas, "Lygia Clark: The Abandonment of Art, 1948-1988", Published in conjunction with the exhibition held at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, May 10 - August 24, 2014
Notes:
In 2014, the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) mounted the first comprehensive retrospective of Lygia Clark's works in 2014. The one-person exhibition entitled "Lygia Clark: The Abandonment of Art, 1948-1988" was held from May 10 to August 24, 2014.
The catalogue for the exhibition is the most comprehensive book on Lygia Clark's work published in English to date and includes new scholarship as well as a substantial number of previously unpublished writings by the artist. The exhibition included Clarks' entire body of work from her representational paintings and drawings of the late 1940s through her geometric abstractions of the 1950s to the works she called "propositions" produced later in the 1960s. The exhibition included nearly 300 works from the late 1940s - 1960s. The catalogue included several works from the 1952 period which are comparable in compositional elements.
A passage in the catalogue cites a reading of Clark's work by Ferreira Gullar, poet, philosopher and author of the Manifesto neoconcreto (Neo-concretist manifesto) of 1959. Gullar proposes a narrative whereby Clark's work emancipates itself from the limiting conventions of painting - flatness, surface, the plane, the frame. The series of paintings characterizing this "emancipation" began in 1952 with a series of abstracts with fields of reliefs and lines.
This lot, inscribed "P40" and indistinctly inscribed: "tela granceza" in pencil to the stretcher, was not exhibited in this retrospective show. It has remained in the present Private Collection in Canada until now.
Antonio Barrozo, Filho Ltd., Rio de Janeiro stamp to the stretcher;
The Estate of Joan Constance Hunt, Toronto
Literature:
Cornelia H. Butler & Luis Perez-Oramas, "Lygia Clark: The Abandonment of Art, 1948-1988", Published in conjunction with the exhibition held at The Museum of Modern Art, New York, May 10 - August 24, 2014
Notes:
In 2014, the Museum of Modern Art (MOMA) mounted the first comprehensive retrospective of Lygia Clark's works in 2014. The one-person exhibition entitled "Lygia Clark: The Abandonment of Art, 1948-1988" was held from May 10 to August 24, 2014.
The catalogue for the exhibition is the most comprehensive book on Lygia Clark's work published in English to date and includes new scholarship as well as a substantial number of previously unpublished writings by the artist. The exhibition included Clarks' entire body of work from her representational paintings and drawings of the late 1940s through her geometric abstractions of the 1950s to the works she called "propositions" produced later in the 1960s. The exhibition included nearly 300 works from the late 1940s - 1960s. The catalogue included several works from the 1952 period which are comparable in compositional elements.
A passage in the catalogue cites a reading of Clark's work by Ferreira Gullar, poet, philosopher and author of the Manifesto neoconcreto (Neo-concretist manifesto) of 1959. Gullar proposes a narrative whereby Clark's work emancipates itself from the limiting conventions of painting - flatness, surface, the plane, the frame. The series of paintings characterizing this "emancipation" began in 1952 with a series of abstracts with fields of reliefs and lines.
This lot, inscribed "P40" and indistinctly inscribed: "tela granceza" in pencil to the stretcher, was not exhibited in this retrospective show. It has remained in the present Private Collection in Canada until now.
Most realised prices include the Buyer's Premium of 18-25%, but not the HST/GST Tax.
(*) Text and/or Image might be subject matter of Copyright. Check with Waddington's auction house for permission to use.
(*) Text and/or Image might be subject matter of Copyright. Check with Waddington's auction house for permission to use.