Sigmar Polke (1941-2010) , Das Paar (The Couple) | Christie's
SIGMAR POLKE - 1941-2010 The sudden death of Sigmar Polke in June 2010 robbed the art world of one of its greatest pioneers, at the age of 69. Originally a maverick conceptualist and German Pop artist, Polke never obeyed the strict principles of either movement and instead used the founding theories as the basis for a widespread exploration of culture and materials. He bridged so many different movements and theories and experimented with so many different media constantly challenging the boundaries of high art, painting and global culture. Just this month, Jorg Heiser, co-editor of Frieze, christened a new theory of artistic practice which he sees developing in cities around the world: Super Hybridity, and one of its key artistic Godfathers as Sigmar Polke. He commented, "In recent years, a number of artists, musicians, filmmakers and writers have dramatically increased the number of cultural contexts they tap into when producing work as well as the pace at which they do so... This phenomenon could be termed 'super-hybridity' and is obviously to do with the dynamics of globalisation, digital technology, the Internet and capitalism... The phenomenon of super-hybridity hasn't come out of the blue...Its more openly polemical - yet fragile - side was pioneered by artists who refused to take any medium, genre or discipline for granted... [such as] Sigmar Polke"' (J. Heiser, 'Pick & Mix, What is 'super-hybridity'?, p. 13, Frieze, issue 133, September 2010 & 'Analyze This', pp. 94-102, op. cit., p. 96). Polke's wide influence on global art and the wider culture grew by the year whilst he was alive and will no doubt continue to gather apace. His greatest asset was his inventive mind and devil-may-care attitude. Known as 'the alchemist', he made multilayered works from materials that included paint, lacquer, screenprint and plastic sheeting. Additionally, his media ranged from film and photography to watercolour, gouache and various forms of drawing. Never satisfied with the traditional modulation of things, his restless approach to materials and creative genius led him down avenues that defied convention. As if to emphasise his independence from history or convention, he sometimes used ephemeral substances, such as fruit juices, beeswax and candle smoke, or sprinkled grains of meteorite or arsenic over canvases covered with resin. In the early 1970s, Polke took to the road, snapping photographs of gay bars in Brazil, bear fights and opium smokers in Afghanistan and later photographing in south-east Asia and Australia. Just like Alighiero Boetti, that other trailblazing pioneer of global art in the 1970s, Polke was consuming the culture within his own. Whilst his hand-painted photographs made at the time were the outstanding works of his travels, it is the encyclopedic paintings made since, the 'caustic paintings [which] brilliantly cross-bred images of Texas gun culture with blow-ups of post-9/11 German newspaper illustrations, including The Hunt for the Taliban and Al Qaeda - rendered as a colossal, grisailled machine painting on fabric', (B. Adams, 'On the Road to a State of Grace', Tate, Summer 2008, issue 13 reproduced at www.tate.org.uk) which stand as the most extraordinary cross-breedings of global culture. An exile from East Germany who moved west early in his life, Polke created imagery that was implicitly critical of both communism and capitalism. From his early life in what is now Poland, to Berlin and Krefeld to an apprenticeship in a stained-glass factory in Dusseldorf, Polke went on to study under Joseph Beuys at the Dusseldorf State Academy. Eventually his travels East allowed him to reflect on the complexities of the profound social changes that took place during his life. His life and art were truly unique and he leaves behind an astounding body of work, the importance of which we are only just beginning to understand. Francis Outred THE PROPERTY OF AN AMERICAN COLLECTOR
Sigmar Polke (1941-2010)

Das Paar (The Couple)

Price realised GBP 769,250
Estimate
GBP 350,000 – GBP 450,000
Estimates do not reflect the final hammer price and do not include buyer's premium, and applicable taxes or artist's resale right. Please see Section D of the Conditions of Sale for full details.
Scroll to top
Sigmar Polke (1941-2010)

Das Paar (The Couple)

Price realised GBP 769,250
Closed: 14 Oct 2010
Price realised GBP 769,250
Closed: 14 Oct 2010
Details
Sigmar Polke (1941-2010)
Das Paar (The Couple)
signed and dated 'Polke 65' (on the reverse)
oil on canvas
15¾ x 21 1/8in. (40 x 53.6cm.)
Painted in 1965
Provenance
Rene Block Collection, Berlin.
Ulf Bischof, Bonn.
Galerie Schönewald und Beuse, Krefeld.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 1998.
Exhibited
Berlin, Galerie Rene Block, Sigmar Polke, 1968-1969.
Copenhagen, Statens Museum for Kunst, Rene Block Collection, 1992, no. 365 (illustrated in colour, p. 72).
This exhibition later travelled to Helsinki, Museet for Nutidskunst; Reykjavik, Listasafn Islands and Nurnberg, Kunsthalle.
Special Notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 17.5% on the buyer's premium.

Brought to you by

Client Service
Client Service

Lot Essay

Related articles

More from Post-War and Contemporary Art Evening Auction