IRVING PENN (1917-2009)
IRVING PENN (1917-2009)
IRVING PENN (1917-2009)
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Additional costs of 5.5% including tax of the auct… Read more
IRVING PENN (1917-2009)

Iceland Poppy / Papaver Nudicaule, New York, 2006

Details
IRVING PENN (1917-2009)
Iceland Poppy / Papaver Nudicaule, New York, 2006
tirage pigmentaire, tiré en avril 2006, monté sur support cartonné
signé, titré, daté (image et tirage), numéroté '12' et annoté à l'encre avec cachet de copyright du photographe et cachet de limitation d'édition (montage, verso)
image/feuille/montage : 50 x 60.8 cm. (19 5/8 x 23 7/8 in.)
Ce tirage provient d'une édition de douze exemplaires.
Provenance
Collection privée, Royaume-Uni
Literature
Catalogue d'exposition, Irving Penn, Flowers, Hamiltons Gallery, Londres, pl. 37.
Special Notice
Additional costs of 5.5% including tax of the auction price will be taken in addition to the usual costs charged to the buyer. These additional costs are likely to be reimbursed to the buyer on presentation of proof of export of the batch outside the Union European within the legal deadlines (See the "VAT" section of Terms of sale)
Further Details
PIGMENT PRINT, PRINTED APRIL 2006, FLUSH-MOUNTD ON BOARD; SIGNED, TITLED, DATED (IMAGE AND PRINT), NUMBERED ’12' AND ANNOTATED IN INK WITH STAMPED PHOTOGRAPHER’S CREDIT, COPYRIGHT LIMITATION AND EDITION INFORMATION (FLUSH-MOUNT, VERSO); THIS WORK IS FROM AN EDITION OF 12.

Brought to you by

Elodie Morel-Bazin
Elodie Morel-Bazin Head of Department, Europe

Lot Essay

Irving Penn photographie ses premières fleurs, des tulipes, lorsqu’il est chargé du numéro spécial de Noël pour Vogue en 1967. Cette campagne marque le début d’un long portfolio fleuri, collectivement publié dans l’ouvrage Fleurs en 1980 et le photographe ne cesse de revenir à ce sujet jusqu’à sa mort en 2009.
Penn utilise les fleurs, et plus particulièrement l’expiration de la floraison, comme métaphore du passage du temps. Il capture ainsi la beauté des bégonias, lys, roses, orchidées et coquelicots une fois leur pic de maturité dépassé, leur apogée terminée. Loin de lui l’idée de confectionner un guide botanique, Penn réalise des portraits individuels de ces fleurs dépourvus de sentimentalité, à l’instar de ses Petits Métiers. Mettant l’accent sur les formes, tons, motifs, textures et déploiements de chaque spécimen, on y retrouve également l’élégance de ses photographies de mode.
Il s’agit ainsi de réelles rencontres avec chacune des fleurs qu’il photographie, toutes capturées dans un style minimal sur fond blanc. Etudes très vives, regorgeants d’angles inhabituels, ces photographies offrent aux spectateurs une vision intense garnie de couleurs flamboyantes et de contrastes qui réaniment les fleurs à leur paroxysme une dernière fois, avant de faner pour de bon.

Irving Penn photographed his first flowers, tulips, when he was commissioned to work on the special Christmas issue of Vogue in 1967. This assignment marked the beginning of an extended floral portfolio, collectively published as Flowers in 1980, and a subject he kept returning to until his death in 2009.
Penn used flowers, often towards the end of their blooming period, as a metaphor for the passage of time. He captures the beauty of begonias, lilies, roses, orchids and poppies once their maturity has passed and their peak bloom is over. His purpose was not to create a botanical guide, but to highlight the individual portraits of these flowers – devoid of sentimentality – as also seen in his Small Trades series. Emphasizing the shapes, tones, patterns, textures and displays of each specimen, these subjects are treated with the same elegant and detailed approach as many of his greatest his fashion photographs.
Each flower he photographed is the result of a real encounter, all captured in a minimal style against a white background. Highly vivid and full of unusual angles, these photographs offer viewers an intense vision filled with vibrant colors and contrasts that bring to life the flowers in their bloom one last time, before they wither.

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