Realized Price:
$_________
Estimated Price:
$_________
Auction House: Sotheby's
Auction Location: USA
Auction Date: 2003
Artist or Maker: ALEXANDER ARCHIPENKO (1887-1964)
Description: nscribed Archipenko, dated 1913 and numbered
1/10
Bronze, blue patina
Conceived in 1913 and cast during the artist's lifetime
circa 1960.
Dimensions: Height: 41 1/4in. 104.8cm
Provenance: Albert Sanders, Great Neck (acquired from the artist)
Greer Gallery,
Inc., New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner
Notes: Literature:
Archipenko (exhibition catalogue), Perls
Galleries, New York, 1962, no. 5, illustration of another cast
Archipenko (exhibition catalogue), Winnipeg Art Gallery,
no. 8, another cast listed
Katherine Kuh, Alexander Archipenko: A
Memorial Exhibition (exhibition catalogue), UCLA Art Galleries, Los
Angeles, 1967-1969, no. 14, illustration of another cast p. 40
Donald H.
Karshan, ed., Archipenko International Visionary, Washington
D.C., 1969, illustration of another cast p. 36 and pl. 27
Donald H.
Karshan, Archipenko: The Sculpture and the Graphic Art,
Tübingen, 1974, illustration of another cast p. 37
Katherine Jànszky
Michaelsen, Archipenko: A Study of the Early Works, 1908-20,
1977, illustration of another cast pl. S47
The Evelyn Sharp
Collection (exhibition catalogue), The Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, New York, 1978, no. 2, illustration of another cast
Alexander Archipenko Band 1 Alexander Archipenkos Erbe Werke
von 1908 bis 1963 aus dem testamentarischen Vermächtnis,
Moderne Galerie des Saarland Museums, Saarbrücken, 1986, no. 14,
illustration of another cast p. 39
Anette Barth, Alexander
Archipenkos plastisches Oeuvres, vol. II, Frankfurt am Main, 1997,
no. 43, illustration of the plaster p. 95
Blue Dancer is
an important work from 1913, conceived during what is commonly regarded
as the most innovative period of Archipenko's career. Here, the artist has
articulated the lithe body of a dancer in mid-movement, agilely balancing
herself on her toes. The vibrant color and animation of this figure recall
Matisse's famed La danse (see fig. 1), which the artist would
have seen when it was exhibited in Paris in 1910. Created at the height of
both the Cubist and Futurist movements, this compelling sculpture
demonstrates the dynamic relationship between the figure and its
surrounding space with a gracefulness reminiscent of the bronze dancers of
Degas.
At the time he completed this work, Archipenko was living
in Paris, and his experiences with the avant-garde had a profound effect on
his artistic development. Of particular influence were the performances of
the Cirque Médrano in Montmartre and Serge Diaghilev's Ballet
Russe, which also had a significant impact on the work of Léger and
Picasso during the 1910s. Archipenko was inspired by these spectacles to
execute a series of dancers, and no other motif figures as prominently in his
oeuvre during this period. Many of these sculptures focus on the elegant
contortions of the body and its interaction with surrounding space. One of his
first works that explored this theme was Red Dance, 1912-1913,
a hybrid of relief and three-dimensional sculpture created in red painted
plaster and silhouetted against a blue background. Archipenko later
recomposed this work, detaching the figure from its background plane and
creating the form for Blue Dancer.
Katherine Jànszky
Michaelsen has written the following about this work: "Like Red
Dance, Blue Dancer is shown balancing on the toes of
one foot, but this figure rests on a small circular plate atop a marble
pedestal. The raised left arm has been added for balance. By changing the
proportions of the legs, a triangular space was formed between the thighs.
The V-shape of this leg is echoed by the bent right arm and mirrored by the
raised left arm. Instead of the large polygonal space between arm and body
seen in Red Dance, in this work there are three semi-enclosed,
modeled spaces. Volumes alternate with similarly-shaped spaces and the
two are complementary and interdependent. Compared to Red
Dance, this figure is both more graceful and more realistic"
(Katherine Jànszky Michaelsen, Archipenko: A Study of the Early Works
1908-20, New York, 1977, pp. 91-92).
Although
conceived in 1913, the casting of the bronze edition of Blue
Dancer did not begin until 1960 when Archipenko was living in New
York. That year, the artist made a trip to France, where he learned the
whereabouts of many of his original plasters that he had left behind in 1923
when he moved to the United States. He arranged to have these plasters,
including that of the Blue Dancer, shipped to New York, where
he began casting them in bronze. The casting was begun under the artist's
supervision and was finished after his death in 1964 under the authority of his
estate. Archipenko executed the present work in an edition of 8, plus one
additional cast. The first six casts, including the present work, were executed
during the artist's lifetime. The present bronze, which is numbered
1/10, was the first to be cast from the plaster and the only
example that bears an edition number of 10. Subsequent casts
of this work were marked with an edition number of 8.
COMPARABLES
Fig. 1, Henri Matisse, La danse (first
version), oil on canvas, March 1909, The Museum of Modern Art,
New York
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