GEORGE CONDO (B. 1957)
GEORGE CONDO (B. 1957)
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PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION
GEORGE CONDO (B. 1957)

Visions of the Dying Bird Species

Details
GEORGE CONDO (B. 1957)
Visions of the Dying Bird Species
signed and dated 'Condo 1990' (upper right)
oil, pastel and paper collage on canvas
50 ¾ x 40 3⁄8in. (129 x 102.6cm.)
Executed in 1990
Provenance
Galerie Bruno Bischofberger, Zurich.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in the early 1990s.

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Lot Essay

Vision of the Dying Bird Species is a testament to George Condo’s masterful imaginings of vivid and enigmatic worlds. Executed in 1990, the painting shortly follows the artist’s return to New York after a highly formative decade in Europe. Blending pictorial idioms foraged from Old Master paintings, American Pop Art, Expressionism, Cubism and Surrealism, it was during this period that Condo cultivated his career-defining ‘Artificial Realism’. In a graphic, fanciful style typical of his works from the 1980s and 1990s, the present work depicts a distinctly dreamlike scene. In a fantastical and comedic array of oil painted forms, a plump green tree is juxtaposed with six severed branches that sprawl across the canvas. On a collaged paper cut-out, two pastel blue eyes—an enduring and signature motif of the artist—stare out to meet the viewers’ gaze with exaggerated, cartoonish amazement. Overseen by a vigilant black bird, the canvas becomes a site of visual play, evoking an innuendo on the act of looking itself. Indeed on closer inspection, one eye shapeshifts into a fish, its curled eyelashes transforming into green fins and its tear duct opening into a mouth. Paying homage to the uncanny, psychoanalytic language of Surrealism in his assemblage of archetypal, metamorphic forms, Condo conjures the workings of the unconscious, and his own unique, free-associative relationship with art history.

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