Harry Bertoia - Straw (maquette for Hawkins Ferry) - image-1

Lot 428 Dα

Harry Bertoia - Straw (maquette for Hawkins Ferry)

Auktion 1014 - Übersicht Köln
24.05.2013, 11:00 - Zeitgenössische Kunst
Schätzpreis: 30.000 € - 40.000 €
Ergebnis: 80.520 € (inkl. Aufgeld)

Skulptur aus Metall mit Kupferummantelung und Bronze Höhe ca. 127 cm. - Oberflächlich angeschmutzt sowie ein Element leicht verbogen.

Bei der vorliegenden Arbeit handelt es sich um eine Maquette für eine größere Skulptur für die W. Hawkins Ferry Residence in Detroit. Harry Bertoia wurde von den Architekten William Kessler and Associates, Detroit, beauftragt, das zentrale Kunstwerk für dieses neue Anwesen zu gestalten.

Mit beiligendem Photozertifikat vom Harry Bertoia Research Project, Rock Cave, West Virginia, vom 19.04.2013.

“'An intellectual exercise' is perhaps the one phrase best suited to generalize about the whole of Bertoia's work to date. For each of his sculptures originated in the mind - from a well formulated but constantly evolving idea or concept based on his perception, not on observation on nature - and was brought to fulfillment through the exercise of his intelligence in making decisions during the process of creation. This is why his work has such a strong appeal to the intellect. It represents an intellectual process leading toward the universal in art. Much of it is willed, brought about by engineering, carefully calculated. It is the product of a modern man's use of his sensitivity and intelligence on materials which are specifically related to the twentieth century world - industrial materials, mass produced where possible, metals that have been refined and extruded into flat sheets, rods, wires, shot. […] 'Precision' is a word that has been applied to Bertoia's sculpture and it is aptly descriptive. His work reveals the precision that went into it, not merely in the mental calculations of engineering details, such as stresses and strains and perfect balance, but in the finishing details of craftsmanship. […] Bertoia's hand craftsmanship, an unusual blend of 'tender, loving care' applied to precisely chosen modern industrial materials, adds the warmth of personal attention to what otherwise might seem cold and inhuman. His sensitivity to aesthetic considerations such as color and texture, proportion and balance, makes itself felt in every piece.” (June Compass Nelson, Harry Bertoia, Sculptor, Detroit 1970, p.48)