- 249
Sigmar Polke
Description
- Sigmar Polke
- Silberbild
- signed and dated 90 on the reverse
- silver nitrate, silver bromide and silver sulphate on canvas
- 78 7/8 by 74 7/8 in. 200 by 190 cm.
Provenance
Gallery Arario, Cheonan
Acquired by the present owner from the above
Exhibited
Basel, Galerie Beyeler; Seoul, Gallery Hyundai, Poetry in Motion, June - October 2007
Condition
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Catalogue Note
The canvas of Untitled may be likened to a laboratory, within which experiments in altered states of perception and representation are explored via the unpredictable cross-contamination of chemicals and fibers. Areas of the canvas with small dots and subtly raised topographies represent patches of erosion, intended to elicit fresh textures within the work. Open about his interest in hallucinogenics, Polke strives to expand the sphere of the possible in art, sensuously approaching substances both exotic and mundane. The present work offers up a kind of delicacy in peach and yellow tones placed dreamily upon a clean white background. Such characteristics appear refreshingly pristine in contrast to the dark earth, navy and grey tones that consistently appear in his abstracts of the 1980s. Here the “witches’ brew of chemical mediums” concocts something new, testifying to Polke’s endless capacity for morphing and transmuting his own oeuvre, growing intellectually and aesthetically more fecund with an alchemical prowess unique among contemporary artists.
Alex Farquharson has described the era-defining nature of Polke’s painterly explorations: “techniques such as these represented a radical affront to the unity of painting as understood by the Modernist tradition. Polke’s works were everything painting wasn’t supposed to be: vulgar, mocking, parodic, decorative, heterotopic, discontinuous, self-reflexive and self-critical... By the 1980s Polke was the consummate and emblematic Postmodern painter.” (Alex Farquharson, "Sigmar Polke," Frieze Magazine, Issue 81, March 2004) The grand and enigmatic presence of Untitled stems not from heavy daubs of oil paint, but from delicate layers of translucent and occasionally reflective material, cumulatively suggesting superimposed veils or an airy projection. An emphasis on qualities of light and transparency permeates Polke’s work, informed no doubt by an apprenticeship he undertook in a stained glass factory in Düsseldorf. Carefully guarded guild secrets since the fifteenth century, the techniques of Bavarian glass painting are known nevertheless to involve complex layers of metallic and sheer substances including silver nitrate. Choosing in other instances to reduce the canvas itself unto glassy translucence, here Polke evinces watery markings that emerge from white ground as if forced to reveal their secrets.