拍品 101
  • 101

ROSE WYLIE | Listening to Miss S.

估價
50,000 - 70,000 GBP
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招標截止

描述

  • Rose Wylie
  • Listening to Miss S. 
  • signed and dated 93 on the reverse
  • oil on two joined canvases
  • 167.6 by 182.9 cm. 66 by 72 in.

來源

Reeds Wharf Gallery, London
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 1995

展覽

London, Reed’s Wharf Gallery, Rose Wylie: Likeness in the Unknown, Recent Paintings, February - March 1995, n.p., illustrated in colour

出版

Clarrie Wallis, Rose Wylie, London 2018, p. 148, no. 129, illustrated in colour

Condition

Colour: The colour in the catalogue illustration is fairly accurate, although the pink tones are slightly deeper and richer and the right most figure's face has more green undertones in the original. Condition: This work is in very good condition. All collaged elements are stable.The top of the collaged canvas undulates slightly and has some frayed edges, which are inherent to the artist's working process. Very close inspection reveals a fine, superficial layer of dust that has adhered to the black pigment in the lower register of the painting and some compressed impasto peaks in places. Further very close inspection reveals some very fine tension cracks to all four extreme edges and some very fine drying cracks in isolated places throughout. Further very close inspection reveals one feather line crack towards the upper left corner and a small network below the left figure's eye. No restoration is apparent when examined under ultraviolet light.
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拍品資料及來源

“A painting is not finally what is does, or what it makes, or what it has, or what it means … it is. The painting is the meaning” (Rose Wylie, cited in: Exh. Cat. Quack, Quack, Serpentine Gallery, London 2017, p. 28). Painterly brushstrokes of fleshy pink dance energetically along the side of the picture plane, forming an imposing profile of the artist herself peering across the canvas. The periphery of this monumental painting orbits around a crude, cartoon-like figure of a woman floating atop a powder blue triangle, which forms an elegant, albeit simplistic gown. This figure is flanked by the enormous self-portrait on one side and a grandiose velvet green curtain encroaching on the scene from the opposite side. The deep black backdrop melts, as if drawn by the forces of gravity, revealing the bare canvas below. Listening to Miss S is spontaneous and vibrantly colourful, simultaneously full of reference points and singing with ambiguity. It has all the hallmarks of Rose Wylie’s idiosyncratic collage-like approach to painting.

Having taken a long hiatus from the art world to raise her family, Rose Wylie emerged to international acclaim in her seventies. The artist’s trajectory refuses categorisation, she has never been part of a 'generation’ of artists, resulting in the development of her distinctly personal visual language. Her paintings, which are typically rendered in a monumental scale akin to billboards, or religious panels, brilliantly weave together a vast array of wildly disparate references, from medieval illuminated manuscripts, to Paul Cezanne’s “lumpy” early works, to the figure of Penélope Cruz in Pedro Almodóvar's 2006 film Volver. As the peering portrait of the artist in the present work reminds us; this is a painting all about looking.

The crude and colourful figures and objects that populate the picture plane of Listening to Miss S cast aside conventional hierarchies of classical painting. The figures are sourced from the artist’s memories, both personal and public, and transformed into paint through the filter of her recollection. In the words of the artist: “You spell like it sounds and paint like it looks. It’s the same thing. It is phonetic” (Rose Wylie cited in: Clarrie Wallis, Rose Wylie, London 2018, p. 10). It is this synthesis of highly personal memories of the artist’s immediate surroundings, and the collective visual culture of a shared consciousness, rendered with a tongue-and-cheek, down-to-earth spirit, which make Rose Wylie’s paintings so captivating.