Ged Quinn (b. 1963)
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… Read more
Ged Quinn (b. 1963)

True Peace Will Prevail Under the Rule

Details
Ged Quinn (b. 1963)
True Peace Will Prevail Under the Rule
oil on linen
72 x 98½in. (183 x 250cm.)
Painted in 2004
Provenance
Irene Bradbury, London.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2005.
Exhibited
London, Curators of Space, Wonderings, 2005.
London, Wilkinson Gallery, Ged Quinn: My Great Unhappiness Gives Me a Right to your Benevolence, 2007-2008, no. 13 (illustrated in colour, pp. 25 and 88).
St. Petersburg, The State Hermitage Museum, Newspeak: British art now from the Saatchi Gallery, 2009-2010 (illustrated in colour, unpaged). This exhibition later travelled to London, The Saatchi Gallery and Adelaide, The Art Gallery of South Australia, 2011.
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. VAT rate of 20% is payable on hammer price and buyer's premium

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Louisa Robertson
Louisa Robertson

Lot Essay

'What I do is add pieces. Truncated stories, half stories, unfinished sentences that hand in the air. Something that might have happened that you're unaware of here' ((G. Quinn, quoted in [https://www.artslant.com/ny/artists/rackroom/39544].)

Meticulously executed with a remarkable control of the brush, True Peace Will Prevail under the Rule is an exquisitely rendered painting by Ged Quinn which unabashedly subverts the traditional romantic notions of landscape painting. Executed in 2004, Quinn projects a decidedly modern narrative onto his immaculately rendered landscape, offering a contemporary and poignant twist on the historical themes revered in the 17th century.

Set within a harmonious landscape, Quinn provides a contemporary reworking of Claude Lorrain's 1666 Old Testament depiction of Jacob, Rachel and Leah at the Well. Crafted in appreciation of Claude's painting, Quinn methodically transposes the original work with technical reverence and admiration, but in doing so, the artist also destabilizes the original associations drawn by Claude. Here, Quinn replacing the well central to Claude's tableau with a depiction of Mount Carmel, an unorthodox religious commune in America, targeted and eventually destroyed by the FBI in the Texan town of Waco in 1993.
Quinn's uncanny juxtaposition shares an etymology with Claude's artistic practice, in particular Claude's incongruous inclusion of the figure of Leah into the biblical landscape. True Peace Will Prevail under the Rule however goes beyond this neat conclusion, with Quinn's replacement of the dominant figure of Jacob, with David Koresh, the Mount Carmel community's leader formerly known as Vernon Howells, who took his constructed identity from the names of a Persian king and the Lamb of God. Deliberately upsetting the harmony of the vista, a model of a pre-Copernican universe is suspended over the town, the universe condensed into a dangling mobile. In this way, True Peace Will Prevail under the Rule creates an uncannily dystopic panorama, creating a dreamlike scenario reflecting on reality. The densely detailed surfaces charged with allegorical statement and conjuring the often-encoded political and theological associations within Romanticism, diverting the viewer from its depicted bliss and invoking instead the darker sides of humanity. As Quinn once explained, 'what I do is add pieces. Truncated stories, half stories, unfinished sentences that hang in the air. Something that might have happened that you're unaware of here' (The artist quoted in [https://www.artslant.com/ny/artists/rackroom/39544]. The result is an uneasy, powerful vision that lingers like an unfinished dream, balancing on the very edge of reality.

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