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Woman with Flowered Hat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Woman with Flowered Hat
ArtistRoy Lichtenstein
Year1963 (1963)
MediumMagna on canvas
MovementPop art
Dimensions127 cm × 101.6 cm (50 in × 40 in)
LocationCollection of Laurence Graff

Woman with Flowered Hat is a 1963 pop art painting with Magna on canvas by Roy Lichtenstein.[1] The work is based on a Pablo Picasso portrait of Dora Maar.[2] In May 2013, it sold for a record price for a Lichtenstein work.[3][4]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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    Views:
    14 315
    14 384
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  • Jawlensky, Young Girl in a Flowered Hat
  • Cassatt, Woman with a Pearl Necklace in a Loge
  • Явленский, "Девушка в шляпе с цветами"

Transcription

(lighthearted music) Male Voiceover: We're in the Albertina in Vienna, and we're looking at Alexej von Jawlensky's brilliant paiting, the Young Woman in a Flowered Hat. Female Voiceover: When you said brilliant, I think you meant that it was both brilliant in terms of its drawing and its conception, but also in terms of its color. Male Voiceover: I don't think I can imagine a more radically painted or colored image. Female Voiceover: That orange is absolutely florescent. Male Voiceover: This is expressionism at its most extreme. Here's an artist who was a Russian. He studied, actually, with Ilya Repin, one of the leading Russian artists of the turn of century, and then gives up that high pitch naturalism for a kind of expressiveness that comes out of Matisse's fauvism, as related to the work of Kandinsky, who was a close friend for many years. We have this just the height of radicality in painting. Female Voiceover: Certainly emerging from the art of Gauguin, also in VanGogh. Jawlensky was in the middle of that whole current at the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th century. Male Voiceover: That issue is especially important for Russian artists like this, because as Gauguin was looking back to a more rural life and a kind of more direct and sort of pure life; for instance, in Brittany and in the South Seas, most famously, the Russians were often looking back to their folk art; they were looking back to Russian icons, they were looking back to the simple printed billboards that were being produced at that time. They were looking for a kind of veracity, a kind of directness, a kind of truth in paitning. Female Voiceover: There is a sense of primitivism here, although the figure has a sense of sophistication about her, an urban sophistication with that fabulous flower hat, and the lovely fan that she holds very modestly toward her face; but, there is something primitivistic in the dark outlines, the abstraction, the sense of geometry. Male Voiceover: I think you've gotten directly to the heart of the painting, for me at least, which is this serious conflict between the subject matter, which is modest and almost quiet. You have this woman who's not looking at us directly. There's an emphasis on her eyelashes. There's all of the accouterments of high fashion with the fan, with the hat, but then painted in the most violent, most aggressive manner one can imagine. There's this expression of 20th century modernism at its extreme. Female Voiceover: Mm hmm (affirmtative), and for me, it almost flips back and forth. Sometimes when I look at this, I see her, and I see those beautiful long eyelashes and the delicacy of her face and the smallness of her red lips, and then other times I look at it and I almost flip a switch and I see harsh black outlines, and the gestures that the artist made to create these forms. There's something very raw about that. Male Voiceover: It's raw, it's strident, and it's just fabulous to look at. Female Voiceover: But, it's also really pleasurable. The colors, although they're bright, they're harmonious. They hold together. Male Voiceover: But they're absolutely violent in relationship to the colors that we would expect. For instance, the woman has a green face, and green-yellow face. Female Voiceover: But it works. Sometimes you hardly even notice. You have to sort of remind yourself her face is green, because in a way, it feels natural. Male Voiceover: There is something that is beautifully artificial in that way. It's as if this like it is not the warm light of the sun, but this is the electric light of the modern era. This is not painting on canvas, this is not even on paper. This is actually on cardboard, and the artists allow that rich brown color of the cardboard to come through in between the areas that has been painted. It reminds me, actually, of some of the work that was done by Toulouse-Lautrec at the end of the 19th century, where you had somebody who was interested in the artificiality of light in cafes, on the stage, and there is something about that here. Female Voiceover: [Daga] did that, too, with ballerinas and the light on the stage. Male Voiceover: That's right, so there is this notion of the artificiality of color, of light, of form, or representation itself as very much a part of this early 20th century moment, this expressionism, this deeply emotional expressive moment. (lighthearted music)

Background

Dora Maar au Chat (1941), by Pablo Picasso, sold at auction for $95,216,000 in 2006

Picasso painted several portraits of his lover Dora Maar in which her face is distorted in a manner similar to Lichtenstein's painting. Such portraits were an expressionist development of the fragmented forms of his earlier Cubist works.[5] A 1941 Picasso of Maar entitled Dora Maar au Chat sold at auction for $95,216,000 in 2006.[6]

Lichtenstein specifically used the 1939-40 portrait of Maar in the Morton G. Neumann Family Collection as the template for Woman with Flowered Hat.[7] Neumann himself had sent a reproduction of the portrait to Lichtenstein after seeing one of Lichtenstein's earlier reworkings of a Picasso painting.[7][1][2][5]

Lichtenstein painted Woman with Flowered Hat when he was pastiching various types of sources, including commercial illustrations, comic imagery and modernist masterpieces. The masterpieces represented what could have been dubbed the "canon" of art and was thought of as "high art," while the "low-art" subject matter included comic strip images. His masterworks sources included the likes of Cézanne, Mondrian and Picasso. During this time in his career, Lichtenstein noted that "the things that I have apparently parodied I actually admire."[8] The painting is one of four variations on Picassos that Lichtenstein created during 1962 and 1963.[1]

Creation

Lichtenstein worked by creating a small-scale line-drawing based on the Picasso reproduction. He then projected the drawing onto the canvas, using the projected outline-drawing as a template.[7] The artist deliberately avoided the easier option of projecting the reproduction itself. According to art scholar Michael Fitzgerald, this was because he wanted to be "true to his discipline of drawing".[7] Lichtenstein attached the reproduction to the wall of his studio next to the painting as he worked on it. A photograph of the artist with the work in progress can be seen in an article on Lichtenstein that appeared in Life magazine at the time.[7][9] Such evidence makes Woman with Flowered Hat "the most thoroughly documented of his variations after Picasso".[7] Discussing the painting with Richard Brown Baker, Lichtenstein commented,

There are some changes in this from the Picasso, obviously complete changes all over, but the more obvious ones: I've changed the face-color to the pink dots and the hair-color to the yellow, since all my girls have yellow hair, almost all of them do. And I was curious to see what it would look like with a more pseudo-realistic color, sort of correcting Picasso, as though he had made an error in painting the face blue. And one of the purposes of it is to make what looks like an insensitive reproduction of the Picasso, and changing the color of the face and hair to ones that would be more conventional would be part of that insensitivity, and there is a general change in the shape of the whole position of the head.[7][10]

Auction record

On May 15, 2013, the painting sold for $56.1 million, including fees, at Christie's. It was bought by jeweller Laurence Graff who said: "It's a masterpiece and when you see a major one like this come up for sale, you only get one chance to get it...Plus, I've got a big birthday coming up."[3] Graff, whose 75th birthday is on June 13, outbid three telephone bidders with a winning bid of $50 million and auction fees that brought the total to $56.1 million.[4] The auction, which was expected to exceed $30 million, coincided with the Lichtenstein retrospective being held at the Tate Modern.[8] The retrospective had visited The Art Institute of Chicago from May 16 to September 3, 2012 and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. from October 14, 2012 to January 13, 2013 before its February 21 to May 27 run at the Tate Modern and finale at The Centre Pompidou from July 3 to November 4, 2013.[11] On May 9, 2012, the painting Sleeping Girl (1964) from the collection of Beatrice and Phillip Gersh had established the previous Lichtenstein record $44.8 million at Sotheby's.[12][13]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c "RELEASE: Roy Lichtenstein's Woman with Flowered Hat". Christie's. April 10, 2013. Archived from the original on November 11, 2013. Retrieved May 20, 2013.
  2. ^ a b "Basquiat Painting, 'Dustheads,' Fetches Record $48.8 Million At Christie's Auction In New York (PHOTO)". The Huffington Post. 2013-05-16. Archived from the original on 2013-06-10. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  3. ^ a b Pavia, Will (May 16, 2013). "The King of Diamonds comes up trumps in auction". The Times. London, United Kingdom. ISSN 0140-0460. Archived from the original on August 25, 2016. Retrieved May 20, 2013.
  4. ^ a b Vogel, Carol (2013-05-16). "Christie's Contemporary Art Auction Sets Record at $495 Million". New York Times. Archived from the original on 2019-01-14. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  5. ^ a b Melikian, Souren (2013-05-16). "Contemporary Art Frenzy". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 2019-08-10. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  6. ^ "Under the hammer: record art auctions". GlobalPost. Agence France-Presse. 2013-05-16. Archived from the original on 2016-03-07. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g Fitzgerald, Michael, Picasso and American Art, Whitney Museum of American Art with Yale University Press, 2007, pp.253-4.
  8. ^ a b "Christie's to offer a Pop Art masterpiece: Roy Lichtenstein's Woman with Flowered Hat". ArtDaily. Archived from the original on 2021-10-19. Retrieved 2013-06-07.
  9. ^ ""Is he the Worst Artist in the US?", Life, Jan 31, 1964". Archived from the original on November 4, 2013. Retrieved October 2, 2023.
  10. ^ Richard Brown Baker, "Interview with Roy Lichtenstein", November 15 and December 6 1963, transcript quoted in Fitzgerald.
  11. ^ "'Roy Lichtenstein: A Retrospective' Debuts At The Art Institute of Chicago (PHOTOS)". The Huffington Post. 2012-05-22. Archived from the original on 2012-06-08. Retrieved 2013-06-08.
  12. ^ "Contemporary Art Evening Auction: New York - 09 May 2012 07:00 PM - N08853". Sotheby's. Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2012-05-10.
  13. ^ Melikian, Souren (2012-05-12). "Disconnect in the Art Market". New York Times. Archived from the original on 2022-06-15. Retrieved 2012-05-15.

External links

This page was last edited on 21 March 2024, at 11:51
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