拍品专文
‘I want to end up with a picture that I haven’t planned. This method of arbitrary choice, chance, inspiration and destruction may produce a specific type of picture, but it never produces a predetermined picture. Each picture has to evolve out of a painterly or visual logic: it has to emerge as if inevitably’ —G. RICHTER
The present three works are spectacular examples of Gerhard Richter’s Fuji series. A sequence of 110 unique paintings, Fuji was conceived in 1996 to aid the Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich, in its purchase of Atlas – a collection of photographs, newspaper cuttings and sketches that the artist has been assembling since the mid-1960s. Much as Atlas discloses Richter’s inspirations and working method, the Fuji works tell the story of their creation in shifting layers of addition and concealment. Displaying Richter’s distinctive abstract language on an intimate scale, each painting presents an exuberant chromatic fusion of red, orange and viridian oil paint on aluminium, overlaid with a squeegeed layer of white that drags the surface into symphonic splendour. Gliding transitions of colour are accompanied by abrupt breaks that reveal shimmering gradients beneath, creating the electric dialogue between chance and control that distinguishes Richter’s work.
As variations on a theme, the Fuji paintings appropriately echo the hues of Katsushika Hokusai’s iconic woodblock series 36 Views of Mount Fuji (1826-33). Where Hokusai depicted the mountain from multiple viewpoints and varying weather conditions, Richter exults in the infinite spectra of chromatic combination and textural nuance occasioned by his process. From a strictly defined palette he conjures an astonishing range of radiant tonal relationships: surfs of seafoam green offset flickering zones of fiery depth; canyons of malachite plunge through bright swathes of white. ‘I want to end up with a picture that I haven’t planned,’ Richter has said. ‘This method of arbitrary choice, chance, inspiration and destruction may produce a specific type of picture, but it never produces a predetermined picture. Each picture has to evolve out of a painterly or visual logic: it has to emerge as if inevitably’ (G. Richter, quoted in D. Elger, Gerhard Richter: A Life in Painting, Chicago 2009, p. 312). In their vivid, jewel-like beauty, these works capture the majesty of an artist who has mastered his medium.
The present three works are spectacular examples of Gerhard Richter’s Fuji series. A sequence of 110 unique paintings, Fuji was conceived in 1996 to aid the Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich, in its purchase of Atlas – a collection of photographs, newspaper cuttings and sketches that the artist has been assembling since the mid-1960s. Much as Atlas discloses Richter’s inspirations and working method, the Fuji works tell the story of their creation in shifting layers of addition and concealment. Displaying Richter’s distinctive abstract language on an intimate scale, each painting presents an exuberant chromatic fusion of red, orange and viridian oil paint on aluminium, overlaid with a squeegeed layer of white that drags the surface into symphonic splendour. Gliding transitions of colour are accompanied by abrupt breaks that reveal shimmering gradients beneath, creating the electric dialogue between chance and control that distinguishes Richter’s work.
As variations on a theme, the Fuji paintings appropriately echo the hues of Katsushika Hokusai’s iconic woodblock series 36 Views of Mount Fuji (1826-33). Where Hokusai depicted the mountain from multiple viewpoints and varying weather conditions, Richter exults in the infinite spectra of chromatic combination and textural nuance occasioned by his process. From a strictly defined palette he conjures an astonishing range of radiant tonal relationships: surfs of seafoam green offset flickering zones of fiery depth; canyons of malachite plunge through bright swathes of white. ‘I want to end up with a picture that I haven’t planned,’ Richter has said. ‘This method of arbitrary choice, chance, inspiration and destruction may produce a specific type of picture, but it never produces a predetermined picture. Each picture has to evolve out of a painterly or visual logic: it has to emerge as if inevitably’ (G. Richter, quoted in D. Elger, Gerhard Richter: A Life in Painting, Chicago 2009, p. 312). In their vivid, jewel-like beauty, these works capture the majesty of an artist who has mastered his medium.