Asta: 550 / Evening Sale del 07 giugno 2024 a Monaco di Baviera Lot 124000134


124000134
Pierre Soulages
Brou de noix et encre sur papier 66 x 46,5 cm, 1956, 1956.
Mixed mediaon paper, laid on canvas
Stima: € 180,000 / $ 192,600
Le informationi sulla commissione, le tasse e il diritto di seguito saranno disponibili quattro settimane prima dell´asta.
Brou de noix et encre sur papier 66 x 46,5 cm, 1956. 1956.
Mixed mediaon paper, laid on canvas.
Signed in lower right. 66 x 46.5 cm (25.9 x 18.3 in).

• Powerful composition from the early pioneering creative years in which Soulages found his unmistakable gestural style.
• The artist participated in documenta 1, II and III in 1955, 1959 and 1964.
• Compositions from the 1950s can be found in the most important international collections like the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., the Tate in London, the Centre Pompidou, Paris, and the Folkwang Museum, Essen
.

Accompanied by a photo certificate of authenticity issued by Colette Souages on April 8, 2024.

PROVENANCE: Dr. Hanns Hülsberg Collection, Hagen.
Ever since family-owned.

EXHIBITION: Pierre Soulage. Gouaches et Gravures, Galerie Berggruen & Cie., Paris 1957, p. 12 with color illu.

Pierre Soulages (http://musee-soulages-rodez.fr)

A group of European avant-garde artists in post-war Europe, among them Pierre Soulages, as well as a number of like-minded painters in New York discovered the non-color black as a means of expression. From a European perspective, they cleansed the colorful and naturalistic paths of the recent artistic past and reflected on the dark black origin of our existence. “Black,” according to the English author and art critic David Sylvester, “was a sacred color for the Abstract Expressionists, it was their lapis lazuli; they charged it with a mystical aura, partly perhaps because of its austerity, partly perhaps because there was something magnificent macho about creating a proper strong black." (David Sylvester, quoted from: Ex. cat. Black Paintings, Haus der Kunst Munich, Ostfildern 2006, p. 11)
Pierre Soulages was one of France's most important abstract expressionists.
His quest for non-figurative art led him to gestural-intuitive painting in the 1950s. Even in early works from the late 1950s, Pierre Soulages found his central motif - the relationship between color and surface. He did not want to depict anything, but to create autonomous works grounded in their own nature. Without just obscuring, the color black played a decisive role in this process. His use of black is thicker in some and more lucid in other places, thus he explored light and darkness in his painting. In doing so, he succeeded in ensuring that the dark color does not absorb the light, but actually becomes a source of luminosity.

As of the mid-1950s, it was no longer just symbolic structures that brought life to the canvas, instead he created a two-dimensional and at the same time deep, richly structured composition with the most minimal of means. Pierre Soulages did not need more than a few subtly nuanced shades for this purpose. He applied the brown with a broad brush over diaphanous layers of black that condense into massive blocks in front of translucent fields.
This type of brown is a Soulages specialty. Applying the paint to the image carrier with a variety of brushes and palette knives, he uses “brou de noix”, a mordant made from the green shell of walnuts and mainly used in woodworking, for his paintings. He described the special nature of the material as follows: “I use brou de noix for its painterly qualities: the relationship between fluidity and viscosity, between transparency and opacity, and also for the contour quality of the applied color: clear, lumpy, blurred.” (transl. quote from http://musee-soulages-rodez.fr)
In the present work, the playful application of paint culminates in the juxtaposition of a blank background and the brownish nuances laid above it. In keeping with the artist's abovementioned characterization, these nuances condense into impenetrable matter. This is accompanied by the rich diaphanous veil of black. The result is a dynamic stage for a composition both clearly structured and yet so sophisticated. [EH]



124000134
Pierre Soulages
Brou de noix et encre sur papier 66 x 46,5 cm, 1956, 1956.
Mixed mediaon paper, laid on canvas
Stima: € 180,000 / $ 192,600
Le informationi sulla commissione, le tasse e il diritto di seguito saranno disponibili quattro settimane prima dell´asta.