Čís. položky 1534


Frank Stella


Frank Stella - Sou?asné um?ní

(born Malden, MA in 1936) Etymology (Q 10) from the Moby Dick series, 1990, aluminium and steel, 235 x 247 x 210 cm, (PS)

Photographic expertise issued by the artist

Provenance:
Dusan Gallery, Seoul
Private Collection, Berlin

Exhibited:
Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg, Frank Stella, Die Retrospektive. Werke 1958–2012, 8.9.2012–20.1.2013

Literature:
Robert K. Wallace, Frank Stella’s Moby-Dick Series: Words and Shapes, Michigan 2000, ill. p. 132
RES World Art, Art World, Istanbul 2012, p. 133 (full page ill.) Exhibition catalogue Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg Frank Stella, Die Retrospektive, Werke 1958–2012, Ostfildern 2012, p.291, no. ill.

Frank Stella began his Moby Dick series 1985, completing the series 1997 by illustrating all 135 chapters of Herman Melville’s novel, of which nine titles are constructed in the form of large, free-standing sculptures. Etymology is named after the preface to the novel which primarily serves to define the word “whale”. According to Melville, this means “named for his roundness” and is found in thirteen languages. Frank Stella uses this explanation of the word’s origin to realise his very explosive and abstract figures. He lends the huge sea-mammal no actual shape; instead he presents to the viewer a sense of the animal’s size and girth. “Stella’s Etymology is abstract but it is not flat. Shining in bright aluminium, it sits squarely on the floor, declaring its multisided presence. This Q construction was one of the first Moby Dick pieces to take Stella off the wall.” The viewer can associate the coarse meshed honeycomb construction of the one side with the enormous mouth of the whale and its countless teeth and villi, other views are dominated by smooth aluminium. Thanks to its otherness and the funnel-shaped, curved form, the central honeycomb creates a second textural space which pulls the observer into the inside of the figure, like the huge maw of the whale. “No single slide or photograph can capture its essential appearance, just as no single word or language can capture the essential whale.” (Wallace, p. 132)

Expert: Dr. Petra Maria Schäpers Dr. Petra Maria Schäpers

petra.schaepers@dorotheum.de

16.05.2013 - 19:00

Dosažená cena: **
EUR 244.300,-
Odhadní cena:
EUR 200.000,- do EUR 250.000,-

Frank Stella


(born Malden, MA in 1936) Etymology (Q 10) from the Moby Dick series, 1990, aluminium and steel, 235 x 247 x 210 cm, (PS)

Photographic expertise issued by the artist

Provenance:
Dusan Gallery, Seoul
Private Collection, Berlin

Exhibited:
Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg, Frank Stella, Die Retrospektive. Werke 1958–2012, 8.9.2012–20.1.2013

Literature:
Robert K. Wallace, Frank Stella’s Moby-Dick Series: Words and Shapes, Michigan 2000, ill. p. 132
RES World Art, Art World, Istanbul 2012, p. 133 (full page ill.) Exhibition catalogue Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg Frank Stella, Die Retrospektive, Werke 1958–2012, Ostfildern 2012, p.291, no. ill.

Frank Stella began his Moby Dick series 1985, completing the series 1997 by illustrating all 135 chapters of Herman Melville’s novel, of which nine titles are constructed in the form of large, free-standing sculptures. Etymology is named after the preface to the novel which primarily serves to define the word “whale”. According to Melville, this means “named for his roundness” and is found in thirteen languages. Frank Stella uses this explanation of the word’s origin to realise his very explosive and abstract figures. He lends the huge sea-mammal no actual shape; instead he presents to the viewer a sense of the animal’s size and girth. “Stella’s Etymology is abstract but it is not flat. Shining in bright aluminium, it sits squarely on the floor, declaring its multisided presence. This Q construction was one of the first Moby Dick pieces to take Stella off the wall.” The viewer can associate the coarse meshed honeycomb construction of the one side with the enormous mouth of the whale and its countless teeth and villi, other views are dominated by smooth aluminium. Thanks to its otherness and the funnel-shaped, curved form, the central honeycomb creates a second textural space which pulls the observer into the inside of the figure, like the huge maw of the whale. “No single slide or photograph can capture its essential appearance, just as no single word or language can capture the essential whale.” (Wallace, p. 132)

Expert: Dr. Petra Maria Schäpers Dr. Petra Maria Schäpers

petra.schaepers@dorotheum.de


Horká linka kupujících Po-Pá: 10.00 - 17.00
kundendienst@dorotheum.at

+43 1 515 60 200
Aukce: Sou?asné um?ní
Typ aukce: Salónní aukce
Datum: 16.05.2013 - 19:00
Místo konání aukce: Wien | Palais Dorotheum
Prohlídka: 04.05. - 16.05.2013


** Kupní cena vč. poplatku kupujícího a DPH

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