- 19
ALBERTO BURRI | Sacco E
Estimate
1,600,000 - 2,200,000 GBP
bidding is closed
Description
- Alberto Burri
- Sacco E
- signed and dated 1958 on the reverse
- fabric, burlap and acrylic on canvas
- 100 by 85.8 cm. 39 3/8 by 33 5/8 in.
Provenance
Wolfgang Halm Collection, Cologne
Private Collection, Milan
Acquired from the above by the present owner in the 1980s
Private Collection, Milan
Acquired from the above by the present owner in the 1980s
Exhibited
London, Hanover Gallery, Alberto Burri, March - April 1960, no. 9
Cologne, Galerie Anne Abels, Burri, November - December 1960, n.p., no. 14
Milan, Galleria Lorenzelli, I sacchi 1952-1958: Mostra Omaggio ad Alberto Burri, February 1979, p. 7, illustrated (incorrectly titled)
Milan, Arte 92, Segno gesto materia: Protagonisti dell’Informale europeo, April - July 1990, p. 55, illustrated in colour
Parma, Galleria d’Arte Niccoli, Alberto Burri, la pittura come materia vivente, opere dal 1949 al 1966, October 1993 - January 1994, p. 55, illustrated in colour
Cologne, Galerie Anne Abels, Burri, November - December 1960, n.p., no. 14
Milan, Galleria Lorenzelli, I sacchi 1952-1958: Mostra Omaggio ad Alberto Burri, February 1979, p. 7, illustrated (incorrectly titled)
Milan, Arte 92, Segno gesto materia: Protagonisti dell’Informale europeo, April - July 1990, p. 55, illustrated in colour
Parma, Galleria d’Arte Niccoli, Alberto Burri, la pittura come materia vivente, opere dal 1949 al 1966, October 1993 - January 1994, p. 55, illustrated in colour
Literature
Cesare Brandi and Vittorio Rubiu, Contributo al Catalogo Generale, Rome 1963, p. 212, no. 266, illustrated
Franco Simongini, ‘Visita allo Studio: Alberto Burri’, A notizie d’arte, (2nd edition), Milan 1970, p. 11, no. 3, illustrated in colour
Nemo Sarteanesi, Burri: Contributi al Catalogo Sistematico, Città di Castello 1990, p. 101, no. 405, illustrated in colour
Paolo Levi, ‘Una ricerca di valore’, Capitol, Milan 1990, p. 190, illustrated in colour (inccorectly titled)
Francesco Tedeschi, ‘Alberto Burri - Galleria Niccoli’, Terzo Occhio, Vol. XIX, No. 69, Bologna 1993, p. 64, illustrated
Exh. Cat., Milan, La Triennale di Milano, Alberto Burri, November - February 2009, p. 55 (text)
Bruno Corà, Ed., Alberto Burri: Catalogo Generale, Pittura, 1958-1978, Città di Castello 2015, p. 54, no. 761 (Vol. II) and p. 121, no. i. 586 (Vol. VI), illustrated in colour
Franco Simongini, ‘Visita allo Studio: Alberto Burri’, A notizie d’arte, (2nd edition), Milan 1970, p. 11, no. 3, illustrated in colour
Nemo Sarteanesi, Burri: Contributi al Catalogo Sistematico, Città di Castello 1990, p. 101, no. 405, illustrated in colour
Paolo Levi, ‘Una ricerca di valore’, Capitol, Milan 1990, p. 190, illustrated in colour (inccorectly titled)
Francesco Tedeschi, ‘Alberto Burri - Galleria Niccoli’, Terzo Occhio, Vol. XIX, No. 69, Bologna 1993, p. 64, illustrated
Exh. Cat., Milan, La Triennale di Milano, Alberto Burri, November - February 2009, p. 55 (text)
Bruno Corà, Ed., Alberto Burri: Catalogo Generale, Pittura, 1958-1978, Città di Castello 2015, p. 54, no. 761 (Vol. II) and p. 121, no. i. 586 (Vol. VI), illustrated in colour
Condition
Colour: The colours in the catalogue illustration are fairly accurate, although the overall tonality of the brown is lighter and more vibrant in the original, and the black darker and richer. Condition: Please refer to the department for a professional condition report.
"In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective, qualified opinion. Prospective buyers should also refer to any Important Notices regarding this sale, which are printed in the Sale Catalogue.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF BUSINESS PRINTED IN THE SALE CATALOGUE."
"In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any statement made by Sotheby's is merely a subjective, qualified opinion. Prospective buyers should also refer to any Important Notices regarding this sale, which are printed in the Sale Catalogue.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF BUSINESS PRINTED IN THE SALE CATALOGUE."
Catalogue Note
“The laceration, the tearing, the stitching, the excavation and inflation of the canvas mark that key moment in which the artist assumes the risk of positioning himself at the limits of the surface.” Carolyn Christov-Bakargiev, ‘Alberto Burri: The Surface at Risk’ in: Exh. Cat., Rome, Palazzo delle Esposizioni, Burri: 1915-1995 Retrospektive, 1997, p. 82. In Alberto Burri’s Sacco E (1958), medium, colour, content and form entwine across a textured and tactile surface. Rendered in fabric, burlap and acrylic on canvas, the work exemplifies the Italian artist’s innovative pictorial praxis: namely, to champion everyday materials and elevate them to the status of high art. Striking in its compositional and monochromatic simplicity, Sacco E is a rare and spectacular work from Burri’s celebrated body of Sacchi. Subversively employing matter as the subject for this pioneering series, Burri looked to the limitless potential of materiality as a vehicle for artistic expression. Revered for their revolutionary use of burlap sacking, the Sacchi defy easy categorisation: neither painting nor sculpture, these captivating works are punctuated with frayed and jagged stitching and suffused with a sense of desolation and destruction befitting of the Italian post-war mood. Housed in some of the world’s most eminent international collections, including The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris; and the Galleria Nazionale d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Rome, to name but a few, the Sacchi constitute the most profound expression of Burri’s consummate practice.
In Sacco E, passages of deep, charcoal black coalesce with the coarse ochre of natural burlap. The defining feature of Burri’s Sacchi, this material was imbued with tremendous symbolic importance for the artist, and the present work’s rough tactile beauty arises from a profound conceptual impetus. Ubiquitous during the Second World War, burlap was utilised for tents, supply sacks, and sandbags, and even woven in strips through camouflage netting. Evocative, therefore, of the turmoil of this historic moment, it became the medium through which Burri was able to comprehend and overcome the horrifying trauma that still dominated the European collective memory in the 1950s. Cathartically repurposing elements of ragged, cast-off burlap sacking in his works, Burri highlights its “visual, tactile and symbolic power” (Emily Braun cited in: Exh. Cat., New York, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Alberto Burri: The Trauma of Painting, 2016, p. 157). In so doing, the artist radically elevates his materials from mere medium to subject matter, from content to context. A key proponent of the ensuing Arte Povera movement that would take Italy by storm in the late 1960s, Burri boldly relinquished traditional mediums, opting instead to experiment with everyday materials that spoke more pertinently to the modern world he lived in: in place of canvas and paint, burlap, wood, fire, plastic and metal would become the predominant instruments of his labour. Indeed, with its coarse textured surface and asymmetrical composition, the present work poignantly foreshadows the fundamental precepts of Arte Povera.
Having graduated from university with a medical degree, Burri was conscripted to the Italian military in 1940 as a combat medic. In 1943, he was captured by Allied troops and sent to a prisoner-of-war camp in America. Thus it was not until 1946, upon his return to Naples, that he witnessed the devastating aftermath of the conflict on Italy. The cities were ravaged with war-torn apartment blocks charred black with smoke, and Renaissance churches, stripped of their façades, were reduced to rubble. Burri’s own brother had been tragically killed, and thousands of others were left homeless or starving. Disillusioned by the senseless brutality of war, Burri was never to practice medicine again. He turned instead to art: what had started as a prison hobby now became a calling, and for the rest of his life Burri immersed himself completely in the creation of extraordinarily powerful abstract paintings. Famously reserved on the hermeneutics of his own esoteric artworks, Burri preferred to afford critics and art historians with a considerable freedom of analysis, invoking a host of multivalent interpretations across the rich ground of his oeuvre, many of which revolve around the artist’s own biography, and the trauma of the war years.
In the present work, dense, opaque black pigment melds into the membranous folds of raw burlap to produce a rich and complicated topography. The viewer is confronted with a dramatic and primitive material surface, profoundly redolent of a scorched and eviscerated landscape. In its creviced and cratered façade, the work foreshadows Lucio Fontana’s seminal La Fine di Dio paintings of 1963: with their wound-like punctures and thickly painted surfaces, Fontana’s paintings similarly portray a ravaged yet ebullient organic beauty that hovers between the forces of destruction and regeneration. Renowned for his impressive manual dexterity with roughly hewn cloth, Burri owed his mastery of needle and thread to both his training as a surgeon before the war, and his conscription to the army where he was required to mend and maintain his uniform. Treading the boundary between laceration and repair, his Sacchi are charged with a psychological intensity. “It is sometimes impossible to discern whether a tear and repair was pre-existing in the source material or deliberately introduced by the artist,” writes curator Emily Braun (Ibid., p. 158). Imbued with this dichotomous sense of ruin and repair, Sacco E contends with a process of trauma and catharsis in which the seemingly desolate surface is juxtaposed with restorative stitching. Indeed, in spite of the semblance of dissolution, the painting’s components hold powerfully and resiliently together.
The burlap used to create the present work is instilled with symbolic potency. Pock-marked, patched, and stitched with visceral striations, the work speaks to a fragile and fragmentary post-war world. As the only trace of artistic gesture in the entire composition, the sewn grooves and furrows become a compelling allegory for humanity’s journey towards psycho-social and economic recovery. Equating Burri’s pioneering technique to his medical background, the legendary curator and close friend of the artist James Johnson Sweeny proclaimed: “Burri transforms rags into a metaphor for bleeding human flesh, breathes life into the inanimate materials which he employs, making them live and bleed; then heals the wounds with the same evocative ability and the same sensibility with which he first inflicted them... The picture is human flesh, the artist a surgeon” (James Johnson Sweeney cited in: Exh. Cat., Rome, L’Obelisco, Burri, 1955, n.p.). At once avant-garde and elegiac, conceptually engaging and contextually evocative, Sacco E stands as a work of pivotal innovation within Burri’s highly acclaimed and influential oeuvre.
In Sacco E, passages of deep, charcoal black coalesce with the coarse ochre of natural burlap. The defining feature of Burri’s Sacchi, this material was imbued with tremendous symbolic importance for the artist, and the present work’s rough tactile beauty arises from a profound conceptual impetus. Ubiquitous during the Second World War, burlap was utilised for tents, supply sacks, and sandbags, and even woven in strips through camouflage netting. Evocative, therefore, of the turmoil of this historic moment, it became the medium through which Burri was able to comprehend and overcome the horrifying trauma that still dominated the European collective memory in the 1950s. Cathartically repurposing elements of ragged, cast-off burlap sacking in his works, Burri highlights its “visual, tactile and symbolic power” (Emily Braun cited in: Exh. Cat., New York, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Alberto Burri: The Trauma of Painting, 2016, p. 157). In so doing, the artist radically elevates his materials from mere medium to subject matter, from content to context. A key proponent of the ensuing Arte Povera movement that would take Italy by storm in the late 1960s, Burri boldly relinquished traditional mediums, opting instead to experiment with everyday materials that spoke more pertinently to the modern world he lived in: in place of canvas and paint, burlap, wood, fire, plastic and metal would become the predominant instruments of his labour. Indeed, with its coarse textured surface and asymmetrical composition, the present work poignantly foreshadows the fundamental precepts of Arte Povera.
Having graduated from university with a medical degree, Burri was conscripted to the Italian military in 1940 as a combat medic. In 1943, he was captured by Allied troops and sent to a prisoner-of-war camp in America. Thus it was not until 1946, upon his return to Naples, that he witnessed the devastating aftermath of the conflict on Italy. The cities were ravaged with war-torn apartment blocks charred black with smoke, and Renaissance churches, stripped of their façades, were reduced to rubble. Burri’s own brother had been tragically killed, and thousands of others were left homeless or starving. Disillusioned by the senseless brutality of war, Burri was never to practice medicine again. He turned instead to art: what had started as a prison hobby now became a calling, and for the rest of his life Burri immersed himself completely in the creation of extraordinarily powerful abstract paintings. Famously reserved on the hermeneutics of his own esoteric artworks, Burri preferred to afford critics and art historians with a considerable freedom of analysis, invoking a host of multivalent interpretations across the rich ground of his oeuvre, many of which revolve around the artist’s own biography, and the trauma of the war years.
In the present work, dense, opaque black pigment melds into the membranous folds of raw burlap to produce a rich and complicated topography. The viewer is confronted with a dramatic and primitive material surface, profoundly redolent of a scorched and eviscerated landscape. In its creviced and cratered façade, the work foreshadows Lucio Fontana’s seminal La Fine di Dio paintings of 1963: with their wound-like punctures and thickly painted surfaces, Fontana’s paintings similarly portray a ravaged yet ebullient organic beauty that hovers between the forces of destruction and regeneration. Renowned for his impressive manual dexterity with roughly hewn cloth, Burri owed his mastery of needle and thread to both his training as a surgeon before the war, and his conscription to the army where he was required to mend and maintain his uniform. Treading the boundary between laceration and repair, his Sacchi are charged with a psychological intensity. “It is sometimes impossible to discern whether a tear and repair was pre-existing in the source material or deliberately introduced by the artist,” writes curator Emily Braun (Ibid., p. 158). Imbued with this dichotomous sense of ruin and repair, Sacco E contends with a process of trauma and catharsis in which the seemingly desolate surface is juxtaposed with restorative stitching. Indeed, in spite of the semblance of dissolution, the painting’s components hold powerfully and resiliently together.
The burlap used to create the present work is instilled with symbolic potency. Pock-marked, patched, and stitched with visceral striations, the work speaks to a fragile and fragmentary post-war world. As the only trace of artistic gesture in the entire composition, the sewn grooves and furrows become a compelling allegory for humanity’s journey towards psycho-social and economic recovery. Equating Burri’s pioneering technique to his medical background, the legendary curator and close friend of the artist James Johnson Sweeny proclaimed: “Burri transforms rags into a metaphor for bleeding human flesh, breathes life into the inanimate materials which he employs, making them live and bleed; then heals the wounds with the same evocative ability and the same sensibility with which he first inflicted them... The picture is human flesh, the artist a surgeon” (James Johnson Sweeney cited in: Exh. Cat., Rome, L’Obelisco, Burri, 1955, n.p.). At once avant-garde and elegiac, conceptually engaging and contextually evocative, Sacco E stands as a work of pivotal innovation within Burri’s highly acclaimed and influential oeuvre.