Karel Appel (1921-2006)
Christie’s charges a premium to the buyer on the H… Read more
Karel Appel (1921-2006)

Personnage et oiseau

Details
Karel Appel (1921-2006)
Personnage et oiseau
signed and dated 'ck. appel 56' (lower right)
oil on burlap
131 x 76.5 cm.
Provenance
Galerie Anne Abels, Cologne.
Galerie Sander, Darmstadt.
Exhibited
London, Institute of Contemporary Art, Karel Appel, 1957, no. 19.
Cologne, Galerie Anne Abels, Karel Appel, August-September 1958, no. 13.
Special Notice
Christie’s charges a premium to the buyer on the Hammer Price of each lot sold at the following rates: 29.75% of the Hammer Price of each lot up to and including €20,000, plus 23.8% of the Hammer Price between €20,001 and €800.000, plus 14.28% of any amount in excess of €800.000. Buyer’s premium is calculated on the basis of each lot individually.

Brought to you by

Annemijn van Grimbergen
Annemijn van Grimbergen

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

The second half of the fifties of the last century is often referred to as Karel Appels Informal period. Appel had come to a free style, much more theatrical and expressionistic than his earlier CoBrA works and the works he made later on in the 1960s. Matter has become more important than colour, and his paint spreads all over the canvasses. He almost sculpted the paint into figures. Conciously figurative, he still resisted to total abstract art.
"Appel presents a form of painting full of emotion, immediacy and strength, which is tied to the archetypical, the original and the human image. The rough, simplified figuration fully reflects primitive art and children's drawings. Whenever in the future more dissolved, thus more abstract images, develop, then still figuration forms a central issue in Appel's world of images" (F. Steininger, Karel Appel, Bratislava, 2005, p. 39).
Karel Appel himself said: "I paint from the matter, because the matter appears to have as much possibilities as the mind, if not even more. It is an unpredictable energy wich can be transformed by contradictions and mingling. It is possible to make the presentation representable but also unpresentable". (Alfred Frankenstein, Karel Appel, Amsterdam 1980, p. 60)
Personnage et oiseau expresses radiant liveliness, painters joy and an unusual vigour. Tremendously forceful and and provoking, it makes Appel one of the best painters of his generation.

This work is registered in the Archive of the Karel Appel Foundation.

More from Post-War and Contemporary Art

View All
View All