YVES TANGUY (1900-1955)
YVES TANGUY (1900-1955)
YVES TANGUY (1900-1955)
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YVES TANGUY (1900-1955)
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On occasion, Christie's has a direct financial int… 顯示更多 先鋒創見:保羅·艾倫珍藏
伊夫·唐吉(1900 - 1955)

《作品:風景》

細節
伊夫·唐吉伊夫·唐吉(1900 - 1955)《作品:風景》簽名及日期:YVES TANGUY 27(右下)油彩 刷除術 畫布45 3/4 x 35 1/8英寸(116.1 x 89.3公分)1927年作
來源
巴黎超現實主義畫廊(1927年購自藝術家)
西貢亨利·霍佩諾大使和夫人(1927年,直至1957年)
紐約威廉·P·馬澤夫婦(1963年前)
東京私人收藏(1982年);紐約佳士得,1995年11月7日,拍品編號41
倫敦佳士得,匿名拍賣,1999年12月8日,拍品編號61(藝術家當時拍賣世界紀錄)
已故藏家購自上述拍賣
出版
《Transition》,1927年9月,第113頁,編號6(插圖)
A. Breton著《Le surréalisme et la peinture》,巴黎,1928年(插圖,圖號69)
M. Jean〈Tanguy in the Good Old Days〉《Art News》。1955年9月,第54期,第30至31頁,編號5(彩色插圖,第31頁)
P. Matisse著《Yves Tanguy: Un recueil de ses oeuvres》,巴黎,1963年,第58頁,編號63(插圖,第59頁)
W. Rubin著《Dada and Surrealist Art》,紐約,1969年,第197頁(彩色插圖,圖號XXVII)
P. Waldberg著《Yves Tanguy》,布魯塞爾,1977年,第75頁(插圖)
S. Korb,M. Wilcox及A. Wilkie編《 Christie's Review 1999-2000》,倫敦,2000年,第271頁(彩色插圖)
K. von Maur〈Yves Tanguy or ‘The Certainty of the Never-Seen’〉「Yves Tanguy and Surrealism」展覽目錄,國家美術館,斯圖加特,2000年,第123頁(彩色插圖,圖95)
展覽
1927年5月至6月 「 Yves Tanguy et objets d'Amérique」展覽 超現實主義畫廊 巴黎 編號17
1955年6月至10月 「Yves Tanguy」展覽 現代藝術博物館 紐約(彩色插圖,第31頁)
1968年3月至12月 「Dada, Surrealism and their Heritage」展覽 紐約現代藝術博物館、洛杉磯美術館及芝加哥美術館 第242頁,編號310(插圖,第102頁,圖138)
1974年11月至12月 「Yves Tanguy」展覽 阿奎維拉畫廊 紐約 編號5(彩色插圖)
1982年6月至1983年1月 「Yves Tanguy rétrospective」展覽 巴黎法國國立現代藝術博物館及巴登巴登國家美術館 第86頁,分別編號30及21(彩色插圖,第30頁)
1983年1月至2月 「Yves Tanguy: A Retrospective」展覽 所羅門·R·古根海姆美術館 紐約 第17頁,編號30(封面彩色插圖)
2015年10月至2017年5月 「Seeing Nature: Landscape Masterworks from the Paul G. Allen Family Collection」展覽 緬因州波特蘭美術館、華盛頓特區菲利普收藏、明尼阿波利斯美術館、新奧爾良美術館及西雅圖美術館 第30及116頁(彩色插圖,第117頁)
注意事項
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榮譽呈獻

Max Carter
Max Carter Vice Chairman, 20th and 21st Century Art, Americas

拍品專文

Infused with a deep sense of mystery, Un grand tableau qui représente un paysage is a powerful early example of Yves Tanguy’s great series of enigmatic, Surrealist landscapes. Painted in 1927, it emerged during one of the most intensive and productive periods of the artist’s career, as he delved into the recesses of his imagination and experimented with a near-automatic technique, arriving at the mature style that he would become renowned for. After first delineating a background landscape whose hazy colors and forms would articulate the mood of the picture, the painting would then be left to dry for a day or so, during which time the artist ruminated upon the shapes before him, contemplating the potential direction of the composition. Tanguy would then instinctively begin to populate the canvas with a series of intuitively arrived-at forms, modelled and shaped by spur of the moment decisions. “The element of surprise in the creation of a work of art is, to me, the most important factor,” he later explained. “The painting develops before my eyes, unfolding its surprises as it progresses. It is this which gives me the sense of complete liberty, and for this reason I am incapable of forming a plan or making a sketch beforehand” (“The Creative Process,” in Art Digest, vol. 28, no. 8, 1954, p. 14). 
Having grown up in Locronan, in the Finistère province in far west Brittany, Tanguy’s dreams of the marvelous had always revolved around and been inspired by the sea, which remained in his imagination an undeniable and ever-present manifestation of the great unknown. During the 1920s, the artist returned to this familiar landscape, spending a number of weeks each summer exploring the coastline extensively, making excursions to nearby peninsulas with rugged cliffs, and visiting the myriad Neolithic monuments that were scattered throughout the surrounding environment. These visits exerted a growing influence on his paintings from 1926 onwards, resulting in hallucinatory visions that he conjured from the depths of his subconscious, but which retained a clear affinity with the sea. In Un grand tableau qui représente un paysage the color palette is particularly suggestive of a wild, rugged coastal scene, its richly variegated blue-grey tones invoking the depths of the ocean. The deep foreground plane appears as a sandy expanse, undulating towards the shoreline, while a large stone monolith occupies the left hand side of the scene, its sheer face suggesting a cliff, a sea-stack, or an ancient menhir. A host of strange, phantasmagorical figures and forms are dotted throughout the scene, lit by an unseen source that causes strong, silhouetted shadows to fall over the ground, while wispy tendrils appear to float upwards, like clusters of seaweed caught in the breeze.
Un grand tableau qui représente un paysage was included in Tanguy’s inaugural solo-exhibition, Yves Tanguy et Objets d’Amérique at the Galerie Surréaliste in Paris from May to June, 1927. In his preface to the exhibition, André Breton praised the new direction within the artist’s oeuvre explaining that it “allows him to venture as far as he wants and to give us images of the unknown…” (Yves Tanguy et Objets d’Amérique, exh. cat., Galerie surréaliste, Paris, 1927). The painting was purchased shortly after the exhibition by Henri Hoppenot and his wife, Helena, and remained in their collection for the following three decades. While visiting a group exhibition in Washington, D.C. in the 1950s Tanguy encountered Hoppenot, who was by then a high-ranking diplomat, serving as French Ambassador to the UN Security Council. Hoppenot invited Tanguy to the ambassador’s residence to see Un grand tableau qui représente un paysage in person, an offer Tanguy happily accepted, proclaiming that he found it “a fantastic experience to see one of my children again after twenty-five years” (quoted in K. Von Maur, ed., Yves Tanguy and Surrealism, exh. cat., The Menil Collection, Houston, 2001, p. 125).

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