Louise Lawler (B. 1947)
Louise Lawler (B. 1947)

La Lecture, 1924, Femme au Livre, 1924, Positioned together, Tous les Deux, ensemble, New York

Details
Louise Lawler (B. 1947)
La Lecture, 1924, Femme au Livre, 1924, Positioned together, Tous les Deux, ensemble, New York
signed, numbered and dated 'Louise A. Lawler 1985 4/5' (on a label affixed to the reverse)
Cibachrome mounted on Sintra
image: 26 1/2 x 38 1/2 in. (66 x 97 cm.)
mount: 30 x 40 in. (76.2 x 101.6 cm.)
Executed in 1985. This work is number four from an edition of five.
Provenance
Metro Pictures, New York
Galerie Ralph Wernicke, Stuttgart
Private collection, Stuttgart
Galerie Isabella Kacprzak, Cologne
Sammlung Wiese, Munich, 1990
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Literature
C. Blase, "Fotografie – in Szene gesetzt," Artis, vol. 39, June 1987, p. 59 (illustrated).
Exhibited
Stuttgart, Galerie Ralph Wernicke, Kunst mit Fotografie, April-May 1987, n.p. (illustrated in color).
Geneva, Blondeau & Cie, Louise Lawler: Selected works 1980-2000 and ‘Helms Amendment (963)’, March-May 2003.
Kunstmuseum Basel, Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Louise Lawler and Others, May-August 2004, pp. 36-37 (another example exhibited and illustrated in color).
Munich, Espace Louis Vuitton, No Such Thing As History: Four Collections and One Artist, March-August 2014, pp. 14-15 and 51 (illustrated in color).

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Sara Friedlander
Sara Friedlander

Lot Essay

Over the past four decades, Louise Lawler has gained access to the most elite private art collections, gifting her viewers with intimate photographs that capture the often uncanny interaction of highly recognizable modern art masterpieces within the bourgeois trappings of the domestic sphere. Lawler’s privileged admittance extends behind closed doors, as she also goes backstage at auction houses, and into the storage rooms of the world’s most prestigious museums. In the early 1980s, Lawler met the collectors Burton and Emily Tremaine, who granted her the rare opportunity of photographing their renowned art collection as it was displayed in their home. The resulting photographs formed the basis for Lawler’s life-long practice.

In La Lecture, 1924, Femme au Livre, 1924, Positioned together, Tous les Deux, ensemble, New York, an early photograph from 1985, Lawler demonstrates the subtle irony that underpins these quietly subversive pictures. Two paintings by Fernand Léger are “positioned together”—installed side-by-side on the wall of a collector’s living room—where the utterly banal furnishings of domestic life create a captivating contrast between the simple comforts of home and the commanding presence of the Cubist master painter. The sofa, side table and lamp—even the fringed pillows that match the Léger’s color scheme—lend the piece an uneasy intimacy that verges on voyeurism. Their juxtaposition unravels the many opposing and often contradictory relationships that predicate the making, exhibition, sale and collection of art, which Lawler unleashes for the viewer in this quietly radical work.

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