ArtCrush 2022: Art Auction to Benefit the Aspen Art Museum

ArtCrush 2022: Art Auction to Benefit the Aspen Art Museum

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 43. Bees in the Wild.

Adrianne Rubenstein

Bees in the Wild

Lot Closed

August 6, 04:43 PM GMT

Estimate

10,000 - 15,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Adrianne Rubenstein

b. 1983

Bees in the Wild


Executed in 2022.

signed on the reverse

oil on panel

36 by 28 in. (122 by 71 cm.)




Please note that while this auction is hosted on Sothebys.com, it is being administered by the Aspen Art Museum, and all post-sale matters (inclusive of invoicing and property pickup/shipment) will be handled by the Aspen Art Museum. As such, Sotheby’s will share the contact details for the winning bidders with the Aspen Art Museum so that they may be in touch directly post-sale.

Kindly donated by the artist and Broadway, New York

Adrianne Rubenstein 

Written by Sara Harrison for Aspen Art Museum Summer Issue 2022 

Executed in oil, with deliberate, confi-dent strokes, Adrianne Rubenstein's paintings feel relentlessly upbeat. Semi-abstract or semi-figurative, depending on how you look at them, these biograph-ical works-which draw on the artist's memories of childhood and everyday surroundings-pulsate with life. 


The bright, acid tones of some pieces recall the palette of 19th-century French symbolist Odilon Redon, but a stronger connection still is to the early-20th-century German group The Blue Rider, whose members emphasized natural forms and the spiritual/emotive dimension of color. Rubenstein's paintings, in their expressive, vibrant naivety, echo those of key members such as August Macke, Franz Marc and Gabriele Munter. Marc painted Blue Horse in 1911; Rubenstein's painting of the same title followed 110 years later and is typical of her dense composi-tions, with the horse's head battling for attention with daubs of bold color and semi-recognizable forms. 


A quote by Munter, taken from a 1958 interview with Edouard Roditi, feels relevant to Rubenstein's practice: "I think we were all more interested in being honest than in being modern." In turn, Barry Schwabsky, writing about Rubenstein's work in Artforum in 2020, observes: "Rubenstein's droll decompositions of the familiar tran-scend their own whimsy by dint of their commitment to what she calls 'a kernel of truth, honesty and curiosity in my intentions'-that is, to sincerity." 


Born in Montreal in 1983, Rubenstein studied first at Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in Halifax, before completing an MFA at San Francisco Art Institute in 2011. She now lives and works in New York, where she also curates exhibitions by fellow artists.