Günther Uecker (b. 1930)
Günther Uecker (b. 1930)
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Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… Read more
Günther Uecker (b. 1930)

Untitled

Details
Günther Uecker (b. 1930)
Untitled
signed and dedicated 'In freundschaft für Sacha und Frau Uecker' (on the reverse)
kaolin and painted nails on canvas laid on fibreboard
60 x 60 x 12.5cm.
Executed in 1965
Provenance
Private Collection, North Rhine-Westphalia (acquired as Christmas present directly from the artist in 1965).
Thence by descent to the present owner.
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.
Further Details
This work is registered in the Uecker Archive under number GU.65.113 and has been earmarked for inclusion in Uecker's forthcoming Catalogue raisonné.

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Elvira Jansen
Elvira Jansen

Lot Essay

‘In the beginning was the nail, which seemed to me to be the ideal object with which to model light and shadow - to make time visible. I incorporated it into my painting, and it forged a link between the works and the space around them. It protruded as a tactile feeler from the flat surface, much like a sundial. A language of light and shadow emerged from the cumulative diversity.’ - Günther Uecker
Executed in 1965, Untitled is a work of spellbinding dynamism from Günther Uecker’s definitive series of nail paintings. Hammered into the canvas with bristling force, the nails wash upward from a bare lower white corner to a larger zone of canvas at the upper left, like a wave lapping over a beach. The work dates from the decade that saw Uecker first master his signature medium, which he began using in 1957 and developed through his involvement with the ZERO Group between 1961 and 1966. Starting from a theoretical blank slate, the ZERO artists proposed to create art anew as a pure and liberated zone of primary existence, offering fresh opportunities for intellectual and spiritual communication. Like many of his contemporaries, Uecker was concerned with the poetic power of motion and vibration, concepts that are eloquently expressed in the undulating surface of the present work. In its billowing crests and hollows, Uecker creates rich patterns of light and shade, giving form to the invisible forces of duration and movement.
Following his subscription to the ZERO Group in 1961, Uecker was exposed to the optical experiments of Heinz Mack and Otto Piene, who sought to imbue their works with a new sense of dynamic reverberation. ‘It was from the start an open domain of possibilities, and we speculated with the visionary form of purity, beauty, and stillness’, the artist explained. ‘These things moved us greatly. This was perhaps also a very silent and at the same time very loud protest against Expressionism, against an expression-oriented society’ (G. Uecker, quoted in D. Honisch, Uecker, New York 1983, p. 14). Uecker’s recourse to the humble nail may also be understood in relation to his rural upbringing in the Baltic island of Wustrow: ‘as a farm boy’, he recalls, ‘I always had great fun in driving the harrow or the seed planter with the horses straight toward the horizon without the furrows ever going off into curves; as a child by the Baltic I always sat by the water, and there I saw sky and water, earth and fire – they used to burn off the fields for the sheep to get rid of the dry grass’ (G. Uecker, quoted in R. Wedewer, Atelier 3, Günther Uecker, Leverkusen 1980, p. 19). Like a shimmering wheat-field or rippling ocean, Untitled is alive with this elemental power.

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