Karel Appel (1921-2006)
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Karel Appel (1921-2006)

La Fleur et les oiseaux (The Flower and the Birds)

Details
Karel Appel (1921-2006)
La Fleur et les oiseaux (The Flower and the Birds)
signed and dated 'ck. appel '51' (lower right); signed, inscribed and dated 'Liege ck. appel 1951' (on the stretcher)
oil on burlap
73 x 92cm.
Painted in 1951
Provenance
Kootz Gallery, New York.
David Anderson Gallery, New York.
Acquired from the above by the present owner.
Literature
J.-C. Lambert, COBRA, Paris 1973 (installation view illustrated, Galerie Pierre, Paris, 1951, p. 178).
CoBrA, 1948-1951, exh. cat., Paris, Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, 1982-1983 (installation view illustrated, Palais des Beaux-Arts, Liège, 1951, p. 94).
W. Stokvis, CoBrA. De Weg naar Spontaniteit, Blaricum 2001 (installation view illustrated, Galerie Pierre, Paris, 1951, p. 259).
Miró & CoBrA. The Joy of Experiment, exh. cat., Amstelveen, CoBrA Museum, 2015, no. 8 (installation view illustrated, Palais des Beaux-Arts, Liège, 1951, p. 68).
W. Stokvis, CoBrA. The History of a European Avant-Garde Movement 1948-1951, Rotterdam 2017 (installation view illustrated, Galerie Pierre, Paris, 1951, p. 171).
Exhibited
Paris, Galerie Pierre, 5 peintres de CoBrA, 1951.
Palais des Beaux-Arts, Liège, IIe Exposition Internationale d’ Art Expérimental, 1951.
Special Notice
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. ! Lot is imported from outside the EU. For each lot the buyer’s premium is calculated as 37.75% of the hammer price up to a value of €150,000 plus 31.7% of the hammer price between €150,001 and €2,000,000, plus 22.02% of any amount in excess of €2,000,000.
Further Details
This work is registered in the Archive of the Karel Appel Foundation.

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Lot Essay

Painted in 1951, Karel Appel’s La Fleur et les oiseaux (The Flower and the Birds) is a joyful burst of lyrical colour. A bright and absorbing blue covers much of the canvas, save for a small window of white in the upper left-hand corner. At the centre stands a large bird with a single band of teal flashes on his face; his body is a mosaic of colour – carmine, navy, yellow and radiant white – outlined in black tracery reminiscent of a stained-glass panel. A second bird of ochre and streaky black rests in the window. Despite their stilled almost pensive forms, both are vivacious and cheerful: a whimsical representation in brilliant paint.

As with so many artists of his generation, Appel’s art emerged as a direct response to the existential horrors of World War II. In its immediate aftermath, the influential and international CoBrA movement emerged, of which Appel was a co-founder. CoBrA took ‘examples from those forms of art which appeared not to have been tainted with the rules and conventions of the Western World…The artists, in fact, were performing a conscious regression, a return to the archetypical images of fantasy thought to lie hidden under the many layers of the human subconscious’ (W. Stokvis, Cobra: An International Movement in Art after the Second World War, Barcelona, 1987, p. 7). Rooted in liberal and capacious exploration, CoBrA’s artists worked in a variety of mediums including painting, ceramics and poetry; it was, as the manifesto read, ‘a people’s art’ that ‘set no aesthetic norms’ (C. Nieuwenhuys, ‘Manifesto’, 1948, reprinted in W. Stokvis, Cobra: An International Movement in Art after the Second World War, Barcelona, 1987, pp. 29, 30). Adhering to a new expressionism seeped in primitive and naïve forms, Appel and the members of CoBrA drew upon images of childlike and animalistic imagery. When asked what moved him, he replied, 'I do not know. I am always inspired, it is life' (K Appel quoted in A. Frankenstein, Karel Appel, New York 1980, p.98).

La Fleur et les oiseaux was painted the year the Appel left CoBrA and moved to Paris, and the painting is a stunning amalgamation of the artist’s practice at a crucial juncture in his career, at once anticipatory of his future work in Paris and a summation of the CoBrA ethos. Indeed, while drawing on the roster of visual motifs he had long investigated, in La fleur et les oiseaux, Appel began to apply colour with a new sculptural force. The painterly black outlines, in particular, speak to the delineates developments in his visual vocabulary, here, producing a woodblock-like effect which demarcates the kaleidoscopic hues. The painting is a delightful and jovial expression of life: Appel said, ‘Art is an expression of man and his nature, and not the idealism God-man. Like a bird singing according to its nature, like a hungry child that cries’ (K. Appel quoted in A. Frankenstein, Karel Appel, New York 1980, p. 60). In La fleur et les oiseaux, the artist suggests a world at its most wonderful and offers new visual language to reconcile the experience of being.

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