Gerald Laing (1936-2011)
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… Read more THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN 
Gerald Laing (1936-2011)

Conception

Details
Gerald Laing (1936-2011)
Conception
signed, inscribed, numbered and dated 'CONCEPTION 1977 CR370 4/10/GERALD LAING' (on the base)
bronze with a dark brown patina
32 in. (81.2 cm.) high
Provenance
Acquired direct from the artist by the present owner.
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.

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André Zlattinger
André Zlattinger

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Lot Essay

Conception dates to the later years of Laing's Galina series (1973 - 80): a series of sculptures made of Galina Golikova, Laing's second wife who had model looks and sat regularly for him. Laing learned from the noted craftsman George Mancini to cast bronze, and in 1978 set up his own bronze foundry at the couple's newly restored home, Kinkell Castle, near Inverness, Scotland. He had abandoned painting (to return briefly at the end of his life) and turned increasingly to portrait sculpture and public statues.

The Galina series was semi-abstract and strongly Brancusian in approach and technique. Furthermore, one of the impulses behind his work from the Galina series onwards had come from being deeply struck by Charles Sargent Jagger's Royal Artillery Memorial at Hyde Park Corner in central London. The artist recalls:

'In 1973 I had an epiphany while looking at [it]. Its powerful, narrative and humanistic content made me realise that in order to produce more significant work I required an infinite vocabulary of forms which the limitations of sheet metal did not allow.
As a result of this experience I change my entire method of working. I modelled my sculpture in clay and learned how to cast it into bronze. Galina I was the first in this new body of work Overall it represents a progression towards greater figuration, but all of the figures are treated formally. They are emotionally expressive and convey essential elements of the sitter with whom I had at the time an obsessive relationship. She was an excellent model with a high degree of body awareness with which she could transmit powerful emotional and sexual feeling.

This period of my work represents a search for a figurative language. The Galina Series was made concurrently with various other sculpture, such as Reclining Figure, Woman with Long Hair and Torso. They were all figurative sources which I developed towards a greater or lesser degree of formal abstraction.

Both subject matter and medium (modelling in clay, casting into bronze) were very unfashionable in the avant garde of that time and resulted in my being ostracised by my peers. I realised the risk I was taking but felt that I had no alternative. It led to a few very harsh years during which I could not get my new work accepted.'

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