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Zdzislaw Beksinski, WITHOUT TITLE, 1981

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Lot description Show orginal version
Estimations: 63 706 - 84 942 EUR
Additional fees: +5% / 3% Droit de suite
73,0 x 62,5 cm - oil, acrylic, fiberboard

Signed on the reverse on the plate: BEKSIŃSKI | 1981

On the reinforcements of the plate an inscription in marker l.g: 13 | LG, below 86/1982 | ACRYLIC [in frame], m.g.: 13 | SR, p.g.: 13 | PG, below stamp authorizing export abroad with paraphrase.





Provenance:



- Image purchased from the Alice and Bozena Wahl Art Gallery.



- Private collection, Czech Republic.





The painting was most likely inspired by Alicja Wahl, who founded one of the first private galleries in Poland in 1979. The Alicja and Bożena Wahl Gallery in Warsaw exhibited, among others, works by Jan Lebenstein, Franciszek Starowieyski, Jerzy Duda-Gracz and Zdzisław Beksiński. In 1981, the first and not the last exhibition of Zdzislaw Beksinski's paintings was held here.



Jerzy Zurek, a writer, Alicja Wahl's former husband and co-manager of the gallery, remembers the painting presented here in this way:

For several years it even hung on the wall in our apartment. Alicja herself was not particularly fond of it, believing that allusions that it was her portrait were out of place. And Beksinski also avoided such statements, repeatedly stressing that he had never portrayed anyone in his life (it seems only except for Professor Banach). And that this is just such an artistic vision on a certain subject. They both had their points, but what is seen is seen. The similarities, however grotesquely deformed, speak for themselves.

In this way - this is and is not a portrait of Alice.



♣ to the auctioned price, in addition to other costs, will be added a fee resulting from the right of the creator and his heirs to receive remuneration in accordance with the Law of February 4, 1994 - on copyright and related rights (droit de suite)



(Sanok 24 II 1929 - Warsaw 21 II 2005) studied from 1947 to 1952 at the Faculty of Architecture of the Cracow University of Technology.



He was a self-taught artist who achieved an unquestioned position in Polish contemporary art, confirmed by the presence of his works in prestigious exhibitions and museum collections. He was initially involved in photography, which he had been interested in since his student years, after 1956 gaining recognition as a creator of photograms with an aesthetic based on textural effects. In 1958-1962, he created abstract paintings-reliefs of rich texture, mainly metal, which are a variation of matter painting. Toward the end of this period, he created openwork forms with figure shapes and full-bodied sculptures in metal. The next stage of his work was 1962-1974, when he devoted himself mainly to drawing. In the 1960s he drew with pen and ink figural compositions characterized by caricatured deformation of figures. From the late 1960s, he created charcoal and crayon drawings, a monochromatic variant of his parallel painting work. Since 1974, he has dealt almost indivisibly with painting. His distinctive style was based on technical perfection, accompanied by an extraordinary vision. He painted a post-disaster world, marked by the stigma of death and decay. His paintings are populated by figures and creatures with admittedly human or animal shapes, but with the characteristics of phantoms, automatons or decaying corpses. The artist did not give his paintings and drawings titles (except for ordering symbols), thus emphasizing his lack of interest in the literary side of the depictions. He himself said that when painting he completely surrenders to the vision, "photographing" it. In recent years, he has incorporated electronic image generation techniques into his artistic technique, which he used to create computer photomontages. Beksinski's art, which has been exhibited and discussed many times, arouses extreme emotions among experts and the public.

The largest, systematically replenished collection of his works in the country is in the Historical Museum in Sanok, abroad - in Paris, in the possession of Piotr Dmochowski, who has been collecting works and promoting the artist's work since 1983. He organized individual exhibitions of Beksinski's works at, among others, Galerie Valmay in Paris in 1985, 1986 and 1988, as well as a permanent exhibition at Dmochowski's own Galerie - Musée-galerie de Beksinski, which existed from 1989 to 1996. He also published monumental albums of the artist in 1988 and 1991.

In Poland, Beksinski's monograph by Tadeusz Nyczek was published by Arkady in 1989 (second edition in 1992). In the spring of 2005, a major exhibition of Beksinski's paintings took place at the Abbotsford Palace in Gdansk Oliva, and the director of the Sanok Museum Wieslaw Banach published a comprehensive monograph on the artist.



Since October 2016, an exhibition of 250 works (paintings, drawings, photographs) by Zdzislaw Beksinski from the private collection of Anna and Piotr Dmochowski has become a permanent fixture at the Nowa Huta Cultural Center. Meanwhile, a permanent exhibition of 30 Beksinski paintings from the Dmochowskis' collection has also been on display at the Archdiocese Museum in Warsaw since June 2021.



(Photo: Piotr Dmochowski, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8960820 )
Auction
Imaginative Art Auction
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Date
02 February 2023 CET/Warsaw
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Start price
53 089 EUR
Estimations
63 706 - 84 942 EUR
Hammer price
63 706 EUR
Hammer price without Byuer's Premium
53 089 EUR
Overbid
120%
Views: 877 | Favourites: 3
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