拍品 41
  • 41

格蕾絲·哈蒂根

估價
400,000 - 600,000 USD
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描述

  • Grace Hartigan
  • 《月份與月亮》
  • 款識:畫家簽名並紀年50;畫家簽名兩次、書題目兩次並紀年50(內框)
  • 油彩拼貼畫布
  • 55 x 71 1/4 英寸,139.7 x 180.8 公分

來源

藝術家
C·格林馬迪斯畫廊,巴爾的摩
霍利斯·塔格特畫廊,紐約
現藏家2006年購自上述畫廊

展覽

紐約,蒂博爾·德納吉畫廊,〈格蕾絲·哈蒂根〉,1951年1月

華盛頓哥倫比亞特區,赫希洪博物館及雕塑花園,〈五十年代:紐約繪畫面面觀〉,1980年5月-9月,56頁,品號10,載圖

韋恩堡,韋恩堡藝術博物館;雅典,喬治亞藝術博物館;夏洛特,鑄幣廠藝術博物館,〈格蕾絲·哈蒂根:三十年繪畫〉,1981年2月-7月,品號3,載圖

紐約,霍利斯·塔格特畫廊,〈小徑與平行線:通往抽象表現主義之路〉,2007年4月-5月,65頁,品號17,載彩圖

出版

羅伯特·索頓斯托爾·馬蒂森,《格蕾絲·哈蒂根:一個畫家的世界》,紐約,1990年,13頁(內文);15頁,品號2,載彩圖;18頁(內文)

展覽圖錄,紐約,惠特尼美國藝術博物館,《美國世紀:藝術與文化1900-2000年》,紐約,1999年,43頁,品號51,載彩圖

瑪麗卡·海爾什科維奇(編),《紐約畫派,抽象表現主義:藝術家的藝術家選擇》,新澤西,2000年,175頁載彩圖

Condition

This work is in very good condition overall. Please contact the Contemporary Art Department at +1 (212) 606-7254 for the report prepared by Terrence Mahon. The canvas is framed in a gilded wood frame.
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

“I have found my ‘subject,’ it concerns that which is vulgar and vital in American modern life, and the possibilities of its transcendence into the beautiful. I do not wish to describe my subject matter, or to reflect upon it – I want to distill it until I have its essence. Then the rawness must be resolved into form and unity; without the ‘rage for order’ how can there be art?” (The artist in a statement for Exh. Cat., New York, The Museum of Modern Art, 12 Americans, 1956, n.p.) Raw, brash, and exploding with vigor across the canvas, Months and Moons is a critical early example from Grace Hartigan’s career that exemplifies her unique brand of abstract expressionism.

Upon her arrival in Manhattan’s Lower East Side in 1945, Hartigan quickly became ensconced within the tight-knit group of New York school painters, which included Milton Avery, Mark Rothko, and Adolph Gottlieb, among others. In 1949, Hartigan travelled with her husband Harry Jackson to San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, where she enrolled in the town’s art school. The present work is one of the first paintings the artist completed upon her return to New York and exhibits the variety of techniques in applying commercial paint to the surface of her canvas. Sprayed, dripped, and painted in swaths of lemon yellow, maroon, stone, black and white, Months and Moons presents a collision of abstracted forms and color that, while providing hints of her Surrealist influences, remains entirely non-representational. At this juncture in her career, Hartigan was struggling financially and lacked the means to acquire new materials. Instead of buying a brand new canvas, Hartigan found one that had been painted on by second-generation Abstract Expressionist artist Bob Goodnough, and then discarded. It was on the reverse of Goodnough’s work that Hartigan executed Months and Moons, priming the cloth and stretching it over elements of shipping crates, which were the cheapest and most accessible options available to her.

Months and Moons was particularly significant to the artist and indeed hung above her desk for many years. The present work not only showcases her painterly bravura, but also reveals her fascination with chance, as evidenced in the black drips of pigment down the side of the canvas. Moreover, Hartigan placed great value on the immediacy of her work, and did not complete any preliminary sketches or drawings, nor did she varnish this piece, feeling that it inhibited the viewer’s experience with the surface. Even today, Months and Moons endures as a vivid and dramatic example from one of Abstract Expressionism’s most individual artists.