No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION
Mark Handforth (b. 1969)

Vespa

Details
Mark Handforth (b. 1969)
Vespa
candles and melted wax on Vespa
39¼ x 47¼ x 19¼in. (99.7 x 120 x 48.9cm.)
Executed in 2001
Provenance
Gavin Brown's Enterprise, New York.
Acquired from the above by the present owner.
Exhibited
Los Angeles, UCLA Hammer Museum, Mark Handforth, September-December 2002.
Dijon, Le Consortium, Mark Handforth, October 2003-January 2004.
Zurich, Migros Museum, It's All an Illusion, June-August 2004.
Paris, Palais de Tokyo, Cinq milliards d'années, September-December 2006.
Special Notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

Mark Handforth's work often takes as its inspiration elements from the urban environment, for instance park benches, scooters, graffiti, parking meters and lampposts. These he reconfigures, carrying out surreal transformations either in the form of the original object or by additions and juxtapositions. Born in Hong Kong, raised in England and now resident in Miami, Handforth has been exposed to a wide range of cityscapes, studying in Frankfurt under Martin Kippenberger to whom his lampposts appear to pay tribute. Handforth, through his travels and his studies, has developed an ability to take shards of our surroundings and place them in a new, revelatory context, often maintaining a significant element of wit.

In carrying out this transformation in Vespa, Handforth has created a sculpture that is at once overt and inscrutable, romantic and mysterious. The use of a vespa was originally conceived for an exhibition held in Turin: in a sense, it recalls the quintessentially Italian phenomenon of young men and women hurtling along the streets of their native cities, a sight immortalised in the movie Roman Holiday. At the same time, Handforth deliberately referenced the British film Quadrophenia in a sister-work that involved a Vespa transformed into a fountain. In that film, based on the 'rock opera' of the same name by The Who, the scooters functioned as the extensions of and status symbols for the dapper drug-taking, counter-cultural Mods. The plot centred on the conflict between the Mods and the Rockers and had at its heart a doomed romance and a sense of disillusion, with the main character finally driving his former hero's scooter along the cliffs and then crashing it off the edge. The Vespa, then, can be seen to refer both to romance and to grim urban realities, to fantasy and to cynicism, while never abandoning a wry sense of play. The scooter has been transformed into a strange shrine, implying that this candle-covered scooter is more than a mere altar to the vintage design masterpiece that is the Vespa itself. The candles have dripped their wax, covering the vehicle in a rich mass of colours that decorate its surface, highlighting the fact that it is no longer intended for its original function, and also slyly evoke the surfaces of Jackson Pollock's Abstract Expressionist paintings, adding a knowing art-historical dimension to the work.

More from Post-War & Contemporary Art Day Auction

View All
View All