Piero Dorazio (1927-2005)
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… 顯示更多 WORKS FROM AN IMPORTANT PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION, LOTS 106, 112
Piero Dorazio (1927-2005)

Monfort

細節
Piero Dorazio (1927-2005)
Monfort
signed and dated 'Dorazio ’59' (lower right); signed, titled and dated 'Piero Dorazio 1959. F. "Monfort"' (on the reverse)
oil on canvas
23 5/8 x 19 5/8in. (60 x 50cm.)
Painted in 1959
來源
Anon. sale, Finarte Milan, 6 June 1989, lot 115.
Private Collection, Italy.
Galleria Fonte d'Abisso, Milan.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2010.
展覽
Milan, Galleria Fonte d’Abisso, Italo americani. Arte tra USA e Italia dalla ricostruzione al boom, 2009-2010, no. 15 (illustrated in colour, p. 40).
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. 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.
更多詳情
This work is registered in the Archivio Piero Dorazio, Milan.

榮譽呈獻

Barbara Guidotti
Barbara Guidotti

拍品專文

‘Pictorial experience is by its nature tied to the perception of space through the sensation of 'colour' (light) and 'form' (drawing and composition), which introduce in the observer the special characteristics as well as the formal and chromatic physiognomy of the image’.
Piero Dorazio

Painted in 1959, Piero Dorazio’s vibrant composition Monfort channels the dynamism and luminosity of Giacomo Balla’s Futurist canvases, using an abstract interplay of lines to explore the perceptual phenomena of light. For Dorazio, the genius of the Futurists remained the bench-mark for Italian artists working in the Post-War era, their revolutionary approach to art and modernity an aesthetic to be emulated. He had personally rediscovered the art of Balla in the years following the Second World War, thanks to a chance encounter with the artist on the streets of Rome: ‘It so happened that, one day in March of that year [1950], while out walking with the sculptor Edgardo Mannucci, as the first lukewarm sun caressed Rome, we noticed a little white-haired man seated on a small wall of the garden behind Castel Sant’Angelo,’ he later recalled. ‘Tugging on my jacket, Mannucci told me: “Look! See there, he’s Balla!” And so we approached to greet the Master painter... Thereafter, we went visiting him several times at his “Futurist Home”, located in Via Oslavia. With the help of his daughters, we looked for the paintings of his “heroic” years and we found there a lot of them, rolled up into packages and stored on a mezzanine in the kitchen. We opened them, and what a surprise! His forgotten Futurist masterpieces were there: “Compenetrazione iridescente”, “Mercurio passa davanti al sole”, “Velocità d’automobile più luce più rumori”, “Pessimismo-ottimismo”.’ (Dorazio, ‘Tre foglie d’oro per le figlie di Balla,’ in Rigando Dritto: Piero Dorazio Scritti 1945 – 2004, ed. M. Mattioli, Milan, 2005, p. 139).

The experience left an indelible impression on the young Italian, and he became a close friend to Balla and his family over the ensuing years, visiting the artist’s studio often, studying his paintings and sketchbooks first hand, and discussing the theories, techniques and history of the Futurist movement with the great master. In Monfort, Balla’s work appears as a strong influence in the shaping of Dorazio’s meditations on the nature of light, the abstract interplay of colour and line echoing the artist’s 1909 masterpiece Lampada – Studio di luce. Using red as a base pigment, the artist layers a seemingly infinite series of delicate, thin, subtly variegated lines over one another to create an intricate web of overlapping ribbons of pure colour. At points, the strands coalesce into dense points of concentrated pigment, while in other areas of the canvas the weave opens up, revealing the array of precisely placed layers of cross-hatching that Dorazio has used to construct the composition. The result is a kaleidoscopic, vibrating mass of lines, which appear to oscillate before the viewer, the bars of colour shifting and moving before the eye, lending an intense sense of depth and three-dimensionality to the composition. Modulating the density and thickness of the lines and gradually altering their orientation to one another, Dorazio plays with the sensations of vision, imbuing his composition not only with a sense of life and velocity, but also an intense chromatic richness and visual intrigue that draws the viewer in to its atmospheric depths.

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