$35,000
Estimate: $50,000 - $80,000
18 Works from the Bachman Collection
Auction: June 4, 2018 1:00:00 PM EDT
Wood painted black.
Executed 1980-1982.
height (with wands): 99 in. (251.5cm)
width (variable): 25 in. (63.5cm)
depth (variable): 13 1/4 in. (33.7cm)
Provenance: The Artist.
The Pace Gallery, New York, New York.
The Estate of Lee & Gilbert Bachman, Atlanta, Georgia & Boca Raton, Florida (acquired directly from the above in 1986).
EXHIBITED:
"Louise Nevelson: Cascades, Perpendiculars, Silence, Music," The Pace Gallery, New York, January 14 - February 19, 1983, checklist no. 20.
"Spoleto Festival U.S.A.," Gibbes Museum of Art, Charleston, South Carolina, May 20 - September 15, 1983.
"Louise Nevelson," Charles Burchfield Arts Center, State University of Buffalo, New York, September 23 - October 28, 1984.
NOTE:
This lot is accompanied by a photocopy of the bill of sale from The Pace Gallery, New York.
The present work is one from a series Nevelson created out of the charred remains of an organ destroyed in a fire at St. Marks on the Bowery in New York City. Already well-known for her painted black assemblages created from the detritus and trash of city life, Nevelson's creations using the instrument's blackened remains give a power and resonance to the artist's already well-known theme of regeneration.
Louise Nevelson was a pioneer in installation art of the 20th century. She is well-known for her monumental abstract sculptures which were often comprised of found wooden objects, painted in monochromatic black or white. Her work follows in the tradition of assemblage art, and shows a correlation with Marcel Duchamp's readymade sculptures. In the artist's own words, "My theory is that when we come on this earth, many of us are ready-made. Some of us - most of us - have genes that are ready for certain performances. Nature gives you these gifts" (Louise Nevelson, in Dawns & Dusks by Diana MacKown, 1976).
Born in Kiev, Nevelson moved with her family to Rockland, Maine in 1905, to escape the violent Jewish persecutions occurring in Ukraine at the time. She decided to become a sculptor at an early age, influenced by remnants of wood found in her father's junkyard. Growing up, Nevelson's family always supported and encouraged her love of art. Yet this passion was inhibited when she married her husband Charles, who forbade her from further pursuing her artistic talents. In 1931, Nevelson left her son with her mother and moved to Munich in order to take classes under renowned teacher Hans Hofmann (lots 1-3). She continued to study with him at the Arts Student League in New York after he immigrated to the United States. As a result of Hofmann's influence, Nevelson discovered a love of Cubism and collage, which greatly encouraged her artistic development.
The next few years in New York afforded her the opportunity immerse herself in the city's art scene, working in the workshop of famed muralist Diego Rivera, studying sculpture with Chaim Gross and drawing and painting with George Grosz. She first began exhibiting her work in group shows during the 1930s and held her first solo exhibition at the Nierendorf Gallery in 1941, where she was represented until 1947. In 1959, her work was included in the important 'Sixteen Americans' show at the Museum of Modern Art and was the subject of two retrospectives at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1967 and 1998. She also represented the United States twice at the Venice Biennale- first in 1962 and again in 1976.
Of the physicality and dimensionality she created, the self-described "architect of shadow" said, "well, I think that the shadow, let's say, for a better word, is the fourth dimension. That shadow I make forms out of is just not a fleeting shadow but it has as much form as a Cubistic form would have. It has forms and I give them forms and to me they're much more exciting than anything that I see on earth" (Louise Nevelson, Smithsonian Archives of American Art Oral History interview, 1964).