ZARINA (B. 1937)
ZARINA (B. 1937)

Pool II (Burnt Umber)

Details
ZARINA (B. 1937)
Pool II (Burnt Umber)
numbered, titled, signed and dated '3/3 'POOL' Zarina 80' (on the reverse)
cast paper with pigment
22 x 22 x 3½ in. (55.9 x 55.9 x 8.9 cm.)
Executed in 1980; number three from an edition of three
Provenance
Acquired directly from the artist
Literature
Paper Houses, exhibition catalogue, New Delhi, 2007, pp. 3, 30 (another from the edition illustrated)
A. Pesenti, Zarina: Paper Like Skin, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, 2012, p. 74 (another from the edition illustrated)
Exhibited
New Delhi, Gallery Espace, Paper Houses, 13 January - 3 February, 2007 (another from the edition)
Los Angeles, Hammer Museum; New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Chicago, Art Institute of Chicago, Zarina: Paper Like Skin, September 2012 - September 2013 (another from the edition exhibited)

Lot Essay

Zarina’s interest in paper pulp arose during a visit to Sanganer, Rajasthan in the late 1960s where the artist watched locals make handmade paper. Realizing the potential of paper, Zarina went on to study papermaking in New York where she invented her own method for casting paper, creating moulds and pouring pulp into them until a final object was created.

Combining the artist’s interest in architecture and geometry, we can read these monochromatic works like Pool II “[…] as a re-configuring of the flat patterns of earlier prints into sculptural forms. What is interesting about the process is that it was accomplished altogether by hand without the use of tools or a printing press [...] Zarina as a sculptor has invented a process whereby she can cast, color and surface her materials, in one breath.” (R. Kimbril, ‘A Personal Language of Geometry and Architecture’, Paper Houses, New Delhi, 2007, pp. 4-5)

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