Christie's announces 'Expanding Horizons: From European Decorative to Contemporary Arts' online sale

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, April 19, 2024


Christie's announces 'Expanding Horizons: From European Decorative to Contemporary Arts' online sale
Takashi Murakami, Untitled, 2015. © Christie's Images Ltd 2021.



LONDON.- Christie’s announced the selling exhibition Expanding Horizons, 34 works chosen to represent the dialogue between East and West in Decorative Art & Contemporary Art. The traditions and aesthetics of Asian works of art were greatly admired in Europe from the early 16th century and resonates among today’s established and young artists in much the same way as it did in Europe many centuries ago. In a series of pairings, this exchange across the centuries is being explored and brought to life using virtual reality technology, from 21 June – 10 August at Christies.com.

The expansion of maritime trade in luxury products such as porcelain, lacquer, wallpaper, silk and other finely-worked artefacts began being imported from east Asia into Europe during this period, where they were acquired and cherished by a number of royal courts and the aristocracy. As the demand for these treasures grew, so did the incentive to adapt and imitate them which resulted in the reproduction of works in the Asian style, a practice referred to as ‘Chinoiserie’. Derived from the word 'chinois' - the French word for Chinese - this style did not distinguish between the geographical origin whether Chinese, Japanese or Indian. Asian works of art and European decorative arts conceived in their image and spirit, have long been celebrated for their elegant designs as well as for their luxurious and costly finishes in the most avant-garde techniques.

Interiors: Within the imagery of Rococo and Chinoiserie works of art, naturalistic themes invariably play an important role. A 28-light monumental Russian ormolu and Japanese porcelain chandelier, almost certainly by Félix Chopin, circa 1850, is shown alongside Genieve Figgis’, The Séance, 2018, the interior depicts a chandelier is the centre of an opulent ballroom, rendered in pastel shades of pink, blue and yellow. Figgis’ technique of painting wet on wet creates a delicate and elaborate intermixing of pigments, the effect reminiscent of Florentine marbled paper.




Polychrome: Cloisonné wares in polychrome enamel were among the most intricate and finely-worked wares imported from China to the west. The technique was practised in China from 13th/14th centuries with the most elaborate and highly prized pieces dating from the 17th century predominantly in an intense turquoise blue (Jingtai) as in this Cloisonné enamel scroll-form table. From the Ming Dynasty, 17th century it mimics a partly opened scroll and decorated with a cartouche of five bats to one side and lotus flowers on the reverse. A similar tone of turquoise blue is used by the French-German abstract painter Hans Hartung, in his monumental painting T1971-R23, 1971 complemented with tones in vivid yellow, rust orange and deep cerulean, set against a deep black background. Over the course of his career, Hartung refined the use of unconventional tools, including spray nozzles and branches, to create gestural marks, whose immediacy was inspired by and reminiscent of the minimalism of calligraphy.

Red: In Asian culture the colour red is associated with life, vitality and light. A Queen Anne scarlet and giltjappaned bachelor’s writing table, London, early 18th Century, is decorated with a mountain landscape which English lacquerers would have developed by copying imported lacquerware. Mingjung Kim’s, Red Mountain, 2021 demonstrates the use of a spectrum of tones of red, suggesting smoky mountain ranges fading in to the distance. South Korean born Minjung trained in traditional Korean watercolour techniques, spending years honing the craft of observing and reproducing nature; with an acute familiarity of her chosen pigments and Hanji paper, she is able to re interpret these traditions and materials to create hypnotically beautiful compositions.

Comic origins: Standing regally on a gilt tasselled base, a Louis XV ormolu-mounted Chinese turquoise-glazed porcelain cat was part of the fabled collection of Louis XV’s mistress, Madame de Pompadour. The collection was arguably the most sophisticated and refined in France at the time and her oriental works of art, porcelain, lacquer and textiles in her collection inspired many followers in society and in the King’s circle. The expression of the cat is fierce, but in today’s eyes almost cartoon-like. More than 250 years later, a similarly comical note is struck by Untitled, 2015, Takashi Murakami, who has elevated the overly-cute manga cartoon style to the levels of high art. Manga, in turn, derives its origins from traditional Japanese woodblock prints, defining a style of strong outlines, multi-figure compositions and a flattening of foreground and background. With its meticulous painterly execution, Murakami’s canvas is packed with bright colour and cute characters, their grinning faces recalling the caricatured expressions of traditional woodblock prints.

Lacquerware; Works of art in oriental lacquer ware featured prominently in some of the greatest royal and princely collections formed in Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries admired for their precious and glowing surfaces. Amongst the most celebrated collections of lacquerware were those of King William & Queen Mary, Empress Maria Theresia and her daughter Queen Marie-Antoinette. The finest pieces commanded astronomical prices in contemporary auctions, especially those with notable calligraphy as in this large ‘Daoist Paradise’ twelve-leaf Coromandel screen, Kangxi period (1662 – 1722). The French abstract artist Georges Mathieu visited Japan in 1957, a formative trip on which he witnessed the work of master calligraphers first hand. Inspired by the sureness and speed of their hand, Mathieu sought to bring the same to his style of lyrical abstraction – where the gesture, liberated from representation, would reflect directly the emotion of the painter. In Reflets Impatients, 1990 Mathieu shows the mastery of this technique: sharp, attenuated strokes contrast with the drips and splashes of paint manipulated with speed and confidence.










Today's News

June 27, 2021

Discovery of 'Dragon Man' skull in China may add species to human family tree

New My Eternal Soul paintings by Yayoi Kusama on view at David Zwirner

Exhibition focuses on a crucial five-year period in Robert Smithson's development

Alone in the temporary new ruins of Rome

Christian Slater is a still-life artist

Christie's announces 'Expanding Horizons: From European Decorative to Contemporary Arts' online sale

Stripping away history's layers, and revealing a new museum

Fondation Beyeler granted building permit for extension project with Atelier Peter Zumthor

Drawings, watercolours and lithographs by John Gould worth over £1.2 million at risk of leaving UK

A rare 1947 Allard K1 for sale with H&H Classicsat Buxton

Metro Pictures opens Wish, a group exhibition

Gerald Peters Gallery opens solo exhibitions of works by Scott Kelley and Penelope Gottlieb

Vivian Suter presents her work at Palacio de Velázquez in Madrid's Retiro Park

Parrasch Heijnen opens an exhibition of new work by Rosy Keyser

Karma opens an exhibition of recent paintings by Andrew Cranston

John Sacret Young, creative force behind 'China Beach,' dies at 75

For a major debut, a young violinist gets personal

Contemporary Czech photography comes to London to expose the universal vulnerabilities of our times

Specialized experiences offer fresh looks on Paris

Romulo Yanes, whose photographs captured the beauty of food, dies at 62

Stephen Dunn, poet who celebrated the ordinary, dies at 82

The Polygon Gallery presents Interior Infinite, a celebration of radical togetherness and unique self-expression

The Royal Society of Sculptors set to launch a dynamic summer programme

JAY-Z & Derrick Adams celebrate 25th anniversary of 'Reasonable Doubt' album with NFT auction at Sotheby's

Why Heated Driveways Are Gaining More Popularity in Canada

Ideas for a Distinctive Kitchen Backsplash

The Best Way to Search and Find the Right Foundation Repair Company

Aircon Servicing - Different Types of Aircon Cleaning Services in Singapore

TYPES OF HOME OFFICE DESKS THAT CAN INCREASE YOUR WORK PRODUCTIVITY AT HOME




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful