Joe Bradley (b. 1975)
These lots have been imported from outside the EU … 顯示更多
Joe Bradley (b. 1975)

Keep on Trucking

細節
Joe Bradley (b. 1975)
Keep on Trucking
signed, titled and dated 'Joe Bradley 09 Keep ON TruckIN [sic]' (on the reverse)
oil stick and pencil on canvas
82 5/8 x 88 ½in. (210 x 225cm.)
Executed in 2009
來源
Jonathan Viner Gallery, London.
Acquired from the above by the present owner.
展覽
London, Jonathan Viner Gallery, Joe Bradley: New Work, 2009.
注意事項
These lots have been imported from outside the EU for sale using a Temporary Import regime. Import VAT is payable (at 5%) on the Hammer price. VAT is also payable (at 20%) on the buyer’s Premium on a VAT inclusive basis. When a buyer of such a lot has registered an EU address but wishes to export the lot or complete the import into another EU country, he must advise Christie's immediately after the auction.

拍品專文

Executed in 2009, Keep on Trucking is one of Joe Bradley’s powerful yet playful Shmagoo paintings. A gigantic pictogram-like sketch made with oil sticks on canvas, Keep on Trucking conveys universal symbols such as a mouth, arrow and the discernible stick-man. Oscillating between figuration and abstraction these motifs are reminiscent, and yet utterly distinct, from his earlier modular paintings; monochromatic rectangles arranged into totemic and crude figures, that he referred to as his modular paintings. At the time, Bradley had a parallel studio activity of drawing that allowed him to break free from the prescribed constraints of the modular paintings. ‘Those pieces are more free’ he said (J. Bradley, quoted in L. Hoptman, ‘Joe Bradley’, Interview Magazine, 29 March 2013). Their reduced visual idiom followed the modernist impulse towards a primitive art which he views as ‘a template for everything that comes after, including the screens that we are staring into’ (J. Bradley, quoted in L. Hoptman, ‘Joe Bradley’, Interview Magazine, 29 March 2013). Thus his work is engaging in a dialogue with the history of art, ‘With painting’ he says ‘I always get the impression that you’re sort of entering into a shared space. There’s everyone who’s painted in the past, and everyone who is painting in the present’ (J. Bradley, quoted in L. Hoptman, ‘Joe Bradley’, Interview Magazine, 29 March 2013). He was drawn to the word Shmagoo for its primal connotations ‘The word stuck with me, and I began to think of Shmagoo as shorthand for some sort of Cosmic Substance... Primordial Muck. The stuff that gave birth to everything […] I have been thinking of Painting as a metaphor for the original creative act’ (J. Bradley, quoted in https://www.presenhuber.com/en/exhibitions/2012/Bradley_2012_4.html, [accessed 28 May 2014]).

更多來自 戰後及當代藝術 (日間拍賣)

查看全部
查看全部