拍品 16
  • 16

塞·托姆布雷

估價
1,500,000 - 2,000,000 USD
招標截止

描述

  • 塞·托姆布雷
  • 《牧歌(我是擁有悅耳嗓子的埃特納之泰西斯)》
  • 款識:藝術家簽姓名縮寫、題款並紀年 Aug 76(左幅)
  • 拼貼、油彩、蠟筆、鉛筆、膠紙紙本,共兩部分
  • 左幅:52 7/8 x 58 1/2 英寸;134.3 x 148.6 公分;右幅:27 x 20 7/8 英寸;69 x 53 公分

來源

Heiner Bastian, Berlin
Private Collection, Berlin
Galerie Karsten Greve, Cologne
Acquired by the present owner from the above in 1994

展覽

New York, Hirschl & Adler Modern, Cy Twombly, Paintings and Drawings: 1952-1984, October - November 1984, cat. no. 28, pp. 30-31, illustrated in color
Youngstown, Ohio, The Butler Institute of American Art, 50th National Midyear Exhibition, June - August 1986, cat. no. 122
Zurich, Kunsthaus Zürich; Madrid, Palacio de Velazquez/Palacio de Cristal; London, Whitechapel Art Gallery; Düsseldorf, Städtische Kunsthalle; Paris, Musée National d'Art Moderne, Galeries Contemporaines, Centre Georges Pompidou, Cy Twombly. Bilder, Arbeiten auf Papier, Skulpturen, February 1987 - April 1988, cat. no. 33, p. 87, illustrated in color (Zurich), cat. no. 33, p. 95, illustrated in color (Madrid), cat. no. 34, p. 97, illustrated in color (Paris) and cat. no. 33, p. 95, illustrated in color (London and Düsseldorf)
Milan, Galerie Karsten Greve, Cy Twombly, April - May 1994
Salzburg, Rupertinum Salzburg, Cy Twombly, May - July 1996
London, Tate Gallery; Tübingen, Kunsthalle Tübingen; Stuttgart, Staatsgalerie Stuttgart; Stuttgart, Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart; Hamburg, Deichtorhallen Hamburg; Vienna, Bank Austria Kunstforum, The Froehlich Foundation. German and American Art from Beuys to Warhol, May 1996 - August 1997, cat. no. 260, pp. 190-191, illustrated in color
London, Tate Gallery, Extended Loan, June - September 1999
Karlsruhe, Museum für Neue Kunst im ZKM Karlsruhe, Opening of the Museum für Neue Kunst, December 1999 - March 2000
Karlsruhe, Museum für Neue Kunst im ZKM Karlsruhe, Extended Loan, September 2002 - January 2003
Karlsruhe, Museum für Neue Kunst im ZKM Karlsruhe, Just what is it... 100 years of modern art from private collections in Baden-Württemberg, 10 years at the ZKM Museum of Contemporary Art, December 2009 - April 2010, p. 264, illustrated in color
Berlin, Galerie Heiner Bastian, Cy Twombly - A Mediterranean World, September - November 2012

出版

Yvon Lambert, Catalogue raisonné des oeuvres sur papier de Cy Twombly, Volume VI 1973-1976, Milan, 1979, cat. no. 199, p. 182, illustrated
Ruth Langenberg, Cy Twombly: eine Chronologie gestalteter Zeit, New York, 1998, fig. 17, p. 243, illustrated
Richard Leeman, Cy Twombly: A Monograph, London and Paris, 2005, figs. 211 and 212, p. 238, illustrated in color and p. 239 (text)

Condition

This lot, consisting of two framed works on paper, is in excellent condition. Both sheets are mounted at intervals to ragboard, with the two collaged sheets in the larger work mounted with clear tape at intervals along the top edges. The large sheet is framed in a dark brown wood frame under Plexiglas, with slight rippling along the top edge and corners related to mild constriction of the current hinging. The smaller sheet is framed in a lighter brown wood frame under Plexiglas; the hinges at the top corners of this work are slightly visible above the sheet and may have slipped slightly. Overall, there are scattered instances where thicker impasto has transferred to the Plexiglas while the pigment was still wet, located as follows: On the larger work: a 1 x 1 inch dab of paint above the large collaged sheet, to the right of center; on the smaller work, a 1 ½ x ¾ inch dab at the bottom of the right edge, bridging the collaged paper and ragboard mount, and smaller scattered spots in the upper right and lower right quardrants.
In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective qualified opinion.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING CONDITION OF A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD "AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF SALE PRINTED IN THE CATALOGUE.

拍品資料及來源

Idilli (I am Thyrsis of Etna blessed with a tuneful voice) is a consummate display of some of the most iconic elements within Cy Twombly’s evocative and utterly poetic oeuvre. Sharing the same inscription as the seminal triptych painting Thyrsis from 1977, the present work encompasses an eclectic mélange that ranges from references to Greek poetry, manifested in graffiti-like script, to expressive color fields. As a testament to the eloquence of Twombly’s imaginative landscapes, the collage composition alludes to an Arcadian concept of classical beauty. Extended across a further, separated sheet, the expressive tonality of deep green shades and soft blue hues evokes the wild and obstructive forces of nature while the movement inherent to the gestural brushstrokes resonates with the cursive velocity of Twombly’s own calligraphic writing. Collaged to the top of the larger paper sheet is a photograph of a forest landscape reflected in the water, a visual trigger that reverberates with the bucolic nature of the poetic reference written underneath.

Since his move to Italy in 1957, Twombly reveled in the richness and grandeur entrenched within antique European culture. His fascination with Roman gods and Greek mythology inspired some of his most celebrated cycles; Idilli (I am Thyrsis of Etna blessed with a tuneful voice) forms part of a series of works on paper – Twombly’s favored medium – created in 1976 that reference the Idylls, a collection of thirty short poems by the ancient Greek Theocritus, also known as the creator of bucolic poetry. Indeed the reference to the Idylls and the powerful lamentation of the shepherd Thyrsis longing for Daphnis allows a more refined view into Twombly’s sources of inspiration. It is the first time within Twombly’s oeuvre that the script is addressed in the first person: I am. This purposeful self-identification with the bucolic poet of lyrical tradition infuses the work with a particular sense of intimacy, alluding to Twombly’s very personal relation to poetry.

The Idylls served as a great influence not only to Twombly but also to other poets including Virgil, who Twombly also admired greatly. In contrast to the heroic writings of Homer (another important reference for the artist), the Idylls of Theocritus are short and highly wrought descriptive poems on pastoral subjects descriptive of a rustic life. The pastoral air of Theocritus’ poetry resonated with Twombly’s art at a transitional moment in his career when he was turning away from the epic themes of mythological battles and towards the elements of water, sky, and trees during the mid-1970s. These components from nature reflected the artist’s life in the countryside of Bassano in the North of Italy where the first two works from the present series were created. Kirk Varnedoe commented on this transition in Twombly’s art: “The land around the house and the (then depopulated) village was thoroughly rustic, and shepherds would come with tinkling bells on their flocks to play music on the hillside directly below the studio windows. Whether from these or other internal cues, Twombly’s art changed as he moved between his fiftieth and sixtieth years.” (Kirk Varnedoe in Exh. Cat., New York, Museum of Modern Art (and travelling), Cy Twombly – A Retrospective, 1994, p. 46)

In its diversity, Twombly’s oeuvre refutes systematic categorization into any specific stream of post-war art. Immersed in the ephemera of a by-gone world, Twombly’s works bear traces of the polymaths of the Antique and Renaissance world, a nostalgic longing for classical myths and legends, that is contrasted by the wild scribbling marks often reminiscent of graffiti-like scrawls. Quoting again from Kirk Varnedoe, who beautifully surmised this fascinating dual presence: “There is a necessary and close exchange in Twombly’s work between his affection for the venerable and timeworn and for the fresh and simple; in the fantasy of the work they fuse to their mutual benefit. His experience of the ancient world as continuously, sensually alive in layers of translation is in some sense consistent with a lush decadence properly called Alexandrian, and it needs constant refreshment by his parallel love for a crude, naïve, and uninitiated manner of expression.” (Ibid., p. 49)