Anish Kapoor (b. 1954)
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… 顯示更多 NEXT CHAPTER: CONTEMPORARY ART FROM A PRIVATE ITALIAN COLLECTION
Anish Kapoor (b. 1954)

Levitation

細節
Anish Kapoor (b. 1954)
Levitation
black granite
16 ½ x 34 ¼ x 34 ¼in. (42 x 87 x 87cm.)
Executed in 2003
來源
Galleria Massimo Minini, Brescia.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2004.
展覽
San Gimignano, Galleria Continua, Anish Kapoor, 2003.
注意事項
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.

榮譽呈獻

Client Service
Client Service

拍品專文

‘I do not want to make sculpture about form - it doesn’t really interest me. I wish to make sculpture about belief, or about passion, about experience that is outside of material concern.’
—ANISH KAPOOR

Anish Kapoor’s vision of worlds-within-worlds is stunningly realised in Levitation (2003), a proto-ovoid form of black granite polished to gleaming, reflective brilliancy. As light bounces off the darkly mirrored surface, twisting around the deliquescent contours of the granite, the viewer is confronted with a spectral, illusionistic alternative reality contained within the object lying before them. Kapoor has long been interested in the nature of reflection and surface, producing several extraordinary large-scale works in stainless steel around the turn of the century; often working with large concave forms, Kapoor’s work seems to turn the physical space of his sculpture into an illusion, the object no longer an object but a window looking into another immaterial world. However, while this Levitation shares many of the formal qualities and conceptual interests of his most iconic work in stainless steel, it also offers a beguiling variation on their themes: the bright version of the world produced in their luminous glare of steel is transformed into something more shadowy in the granite, the enveloping sense of depth generated in his concave works reversed in the swell of the work’s form. A dizzying feeling of infinity remains in the play of lights which glance off the work, but the object it seems to emerge from is not erased – on the contrary, we are reminded of its robustness and physicality, even as something more ethereal seems to emanate miraculously from its centre, achieving a magical otherworldliness. ‘The interesting thing about a polished surface to me is that when it is really perfect enough something happens’ Kapoor has said, ‘it literally ceases to be physical; it levitates’ (A. Kapoor, quoted in Anish Kapoor, exh. cat., Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, 2008, p. 53).

更多來自 戰後及當代藝術日間拍賣

查看全部
查看全部