Thomas Struth (B. 1954)
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… Read more PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION
Thomas Struth (B. 1954)

Paradise 03, Daintree, Australien

Details
Thomas Struth (B. 1954)
Paradise 03, Daintree, Australien
chromogenic print, face-mounted to acrylic in artist's frame
signed ‘Thomas Struth’ on a paper label (frame backing board)
image: 69 ¾ x 101 5/8in. (177.2 x 257.5cm.)
sheet: 72 ¼ x 104in. (183.5 x 264.2cm.)
frame: 75 1/8 x 106 ¾in. (191 x 271.1cm.)
Photographed in 1998, this work is number three from an edition of ten

Other works from this edition are in the collection of 21st Century Museum of Contemporary Art, Kanazawa and promised to the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia.
Provenance
Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2000.
Literature
Thomas Struth, Pictures of Paradise, Schriftenreihe, Band 4, exh. cat., Siegen, Museum für Gegenwartskunst, 2008 (illustrated in colour, p. 50).
H. Reust, N. Pitman and J. Hartmann (eds.), Thomas Struth. New Pictures from Paradise, Munich 2017, p. 71 (illustrated in colour, pp. 8 – 9).
Exhibited
Siegen, Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Open Exhibition, 2001 – 2002 (another from the edition exhibited).
Siegen, Museum für Gegenwartskunst, August Sander und Thomas Struth, Landschaften, 2002 – 2003 (another from the edition exhibited).
New York, Marian Goodman Gallery, New Pictures from Paradise, 1999 – 2000. This exhibition later travelled to Paris, Marian Goodman Gallery.
Dresden, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, New Pictures from Paradise, 2002, no. 7291 (another from the edition exhibited; illustrated in colour, unpaged). This exhibition later travelled to Salamanca, Universidad – Centro de Fotografia.
Dallas, Dallas Museum of Art, Thomas Struth 1977 2002, 2002 – 2003, p. 174 (another edition exhibited; illustrated in colour, p. 21).This exhibition later travelled to New York, The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Chicago, Museum of Contemporary Art.
Siegen, Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Kontexte der Fotografie, 2005 – 2006 (another from the edition exhibited).
Jüchen/Neuss, Schloss Dyck, Paradies und zurück - Sammlung Rheingold, 2008 (another from the edition exhibited).
Zurich, Kunsthaus Zurich, Thomas Struth Fotografien 1978 2010, 2010 – 2011, p. 207, no. 7291 (another from the edition exhibited; illustrated in colour, pp. 104 – 105 and 207). This exhibition later travelled to Düsseldorf, Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen and London, Whitechapel Gallery.
Lanzarote, Museo Internacional de Arte Contemporáneo de Lanzarote MIAC, Biennale Lanzarote, 2013 – 2014 (another from the edition exhibited).
Hamburg, Deichtorhallen, Sammlung Viehof - Internationale Kunst der Gegenwart, 2016 – 2017 (another from the edition exhibited).
Beijing, Minsheng Art Museum, Deutschland 8 German Art Beijing, 2017 (another from the edition exhibited).
Siegen, Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Die andere Hälfte, 2018 (another from the edition exhibited).
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. The VAT treatment will depend on whether you have registered to bid with an EU or non-EU address: If you register to bid with an address within the EU you will be invoiced under the VAT Margin Scheme. If you register to bid with an address outside of the EU you will be invoiced under standard VAT rules.

Brought to you by

Jeremy Morrison
Jeremy Morrison

Lot Essay

A sprawling, immersive vision of natural chaos, the present workis among the earliest photographs in Thomas Struth’s celebrated series New Pictures from Paradise. Executed in 1998, it belongs to the first group of works in the cycle, depicting the tropical rainforest in Daintree, northeast Australia. Taken at Emmagen Creek, its tangle of branches and foliage borders on painterly abstraction, spiked with patches of sky and fragmented by beams of light. Described by the artist as his ‘most intuitive’ body of work, the series evolved from his pursuit of increasingly complex pictorial structures, inspired by both his Museum Photographs of the early 1990s and his subsequent depictions of China’s bustling cities. Over the next nine years, the project would take him to the Yunnan Province in China, the island of Yakushima in Japan, California, the Bavarian forest in Germany, Brazil, Peru, Hawaii and New Smyrna Beach in Florida. For Struth, the notion of ‘paradise’ has less to do with the works’ subject matter than with the viewer’s experience of looking at them. In their knotted picture planes, all sense of visual hierarchy dissolves, creating instead an open utopia of free-flowing visual information. Though replete with religious and art-historical references – from biblical idylls to Romantic landscape painting to the ‘all-over’ surfaces of Jackson Pollock – the present work is ultimately a conceptual vehicle for reflecting upon the way we process our surroundings.

No longer having to contend with variable, moving crowds of people – a feature of Struth’s work throughout the 1990s – the New Pictures from Paradise adopted a more economical, contemplative approach to their subject matter. His travels throughout Asia were particularly instructive in this regard:

‘My trips to China made me aware of Brice Marden's "Cold Mountain" paintings’, he explains. ‘You can feel the time invested in those canvases. Marden engages in Asian calligraphy but frees the characters of their semantic aspect… I try to constantly be in between spaces and to feel life's breath – the rhythm of inhaling and exhaling, as in tai chi. Every day, I could think of thirty pictures that would have a spectacular effect, but it's not about big ideas. Instead I'm trying to effectively unite the conscious and the unconscious of life and the time I live in and thereby create authentic pictures’ (T. Struth, ‘A Thousand Words’, in Artforum International, Vol. XL No. 9, May 2002, p. 151).

If the New Pictures from Paradise hark back to the dawn of creation in their subject matter, their composition also invokes a primeval idea of vision: a searching, self-reflexive mode of reading visual data, free from overarching structures and principles. ‘Paradise has always been the fictive point of departure for a transformed view of the world’, writes Hans Rudolf Reust. ‘Changed, we grow toward ourselves – and each other – out of the picture’s jungle’ (H. R. Reust, quoted ibid.).

More from Masterpieces of Design and Photography

View All
View All