Paula Rego (b. 1935)
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Paula Rego (b. 1935)

Deposition

Details
Paula Rego (b. 1935)
Deposition
pastel and graphite on paper laid down on aluminium
63 x 47 1/8in. (160 x 119.8cm.)
Executed in 2000
Provenance
Marlborough Fine Art Ltd., London.
Acquired from the above by the present owner.
Exhibited
Kendal, Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Paula Rego, Celestina's House, June-October 2001.
New Haven, Yale Centre for British Art, Paula Rego, April-June 2002, no. 17 (illustrated).
Special Notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis. Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent. Please note Payments and Collections will be unavailable on Monday 12th July 2010 due to a major update to the Client Accounting IT system. For further details please call +44 (0) 20 7839 9060 or e-mail info@christies.com

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Lot Essay

Painted in 2000 and exhibited as part of major exhibition of recent paintings entitled Celestina's House shown at the Abbot Hall Art Gallery in Kendal in 2001, Deposition is a work that in a wholly secular way powerfully invokes a sense of religious narrative and mystery. It belongs to a series of works that Rego painted around the turn of the millennium that deliberately restaged Christian themes in a contemporary setting and which made particular use of figures descending from or slumped at the foot of her studio ladder in a mysterious echo of the religious but also strongly art-historical theme of Christ's Deposition from the cross. In major paintings and triptychs such as Martha Mary and Magdelene of 1999, Betrothal; Lessons, Wreck after 'Marriage A la Mode' by Hogarth of 1999, the Pillowman of 2004 and Human Cargo 2007 Rego repeatedly uses the ladder as a powerful pictorial presence seeming to represent a tool of status and an instrument of the Passion. Some figures sit atop the ladder in an elevated position of apparent status, others struggle up and down it or labour underneath it as if bearing a cross. Here, in this work a woman leans seemingly defeated at its foot, while the empty ladder ascends into darkness. Like the pieta-like figures at the foot of the ladder depicted in her triptych tribute to Hogarth's Marriage à la Mode, the melancholy woman in this mysterious painting also seems to illustrate part of an unknown contemporary story of a secular Lamentation. 'We make sense of the world through stories' Rego has said, ' It's the only thing we've got. All religions are stories, the Bible is stories, history is a form of storytelling...that's how you give life some structure...I think it is because I am Portuguese and because I love stories and Christianity is a very good story...a story loaded with meaning, it is beautiful but in a rather terrifying way. It is in your bowels. If you go on a picnic and the water is turning into wine before your very eyes - because nothing is just a picnic - well, then you have an explanation for the magic that exists already.' (P. Rego quoted in John McEwan, Paula Rego, London 2006, p. 287).

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