- 23
塞·托姆布雷
描述
- 塞·托姆布雷
- 《激情之罪 I》
- 款識:畫家紀年 MCMXXXXXX
- 鉛筆、蠟筆、油畫畫布
- 75 x 78 3/4英寸;190.5 x 200公分
- 作於1960年。
來源
Heiner Friedrich, Cologne
Thordis Möller, Cologne
Gagosian Gallery, New York
Erich Marx, Berlin
Private Collection, Milan
展覽
Düsseldorf, Städtische Kunsthalle; Baden-Baden, Staatliche Kunsthalle, Surrealität - Bildrealität, 1924-1974: in den unzähligen Bildern des Lebens, December 1974 – February 1975, cat. no. 364, p. 26, illustrated in color
出版
Heiner Bastian, Cy Twombly: Bilder/ Paintings 1952-1976, Zurich, 1978, pl. 29, n. p., illustrated in color
Heiner Bastian, ed., Cy Twombly Catalogue Raisonné of the Paintings Volume I 1948-1960, Munich, 1992, cat. no. 137, p. 221, illustrated in color
Condition
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NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING CONDITION OF A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD "AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF SALE PRINTED IN THE CATALOGUE.
拍品資料及來源
In early 1960 Twombly and his family had moved into a grand new home in a seventeenth-century Palazzo on the Via di Monserrato in Rome. His everyday life was infused with the antiquarian splendour and colourful sights and smells of a living city surrounded by the classically Arcadian Roman campagna. Denoting a movement away from the measured rhythm of Twombly’s earlier 1950s production, the present work signals an urgent and fractured transmutation of classical stimuli and the mythologically evocative Roman landscape. Articulated in fits of stuttering marks, numbers, fluttering forms and explosive scribbles, Crimes of Passion I enunciates a fragmented vision and reimagining of the ancient myths of love and Eros that permeate the culture of this historic city. Discussing the sister painting of the present work, Nicholas Cullinan has observed: “By the early 1960s… the languor and lightness of Twombly’s first works following his move to Italy subsided, and began to be increasingly replaced by a newfound emphasis on anxiety, violence and an ever-more baroque aesthetic of painting. A Murder of Passion and Crimes of Passion II, both of 1960, make this apparent. The latter was originally dedicated to the Marquis de Sade, and the aggressive erotics of the author to whom the work is dedicated are conjured by an accumulation of dismembered body parts. The heightened eroticism and sensuality that entered Twombly’s art at this point is marked not only by the titular associations, smatterings of orifices, breasts that double for buttocks, and phalluses adorned with scribbles of pencil that seem to describe pubic hair, but also by a stylistic shift articulated by techniques such as smearing, an ever-increasing impasto and the use of progressively saturated colours.” (Nicholas Cullinan, ‘Insinuating Elegance: The Anxiety of Influence’ in Exh. Cat., London, Tate Modern, Cy Twombly: Cycles and Seasons, 2008, p. 84) Marking the very beginning of this movement, the present work invokes the classical theme of Eros that utterly permeates Twombly’s Roman paintings from 1960 onwards. Aligned with the explicit subject of the subsequent Rape of the Sabines from 1961 and the Museum of Modern Art’s Leda and the Swan from 1962, Crimes of Passion I and II communicate an erotic excess via an almost obsessional explosion of gendered body parts inspired by the artist’s own intensely erudite knowledge of the classics - which by 1960 was stimulated by the excess and grandeur of a Baroque Rome in ruins.
Herein, Twombly's staggering innovation and inimitable abstract aesthetic are on full display through the work's visceral imagery, compositional economy, and graphic intelligence, traits that appear so instinctive yet seemingly arbitrary. Indeed, Crimes of Passion I presents a mesmerizing paragon of Twombly's pioneering interrogation of semiotic sign systems, a device strongly allied with Roland Barthes' observation that "What happens on the stage Twombly offers us (whether it is canvas or paper) is something which partakes of several kinds of event." (Roland Barthes in Exh.Cat., New York, Whitney Museum of American Art, Cy Twombly: Paintings and Drawings 1954-1977, 1979, p. 9) In accordance with Twombly's best output, Crimes of Passion I mediates the boundary between figuration and abstraction, continually enticing the viewer with elusive meaning and challenging the deductions inherent to signifier-referent equations.
Reflecting the way in which Freud and Jung identified a mirror for the unconscious in classical mythology, Twombly’s tableau of signs is entrenched within a wealth of classical archetypes. Certainly, Pablo Picasso’s contemporaneous The Rape of the Sabine Women from 1962 further demonstrates another master who is skilled at mining the classical for metaphoric depictions of erotic aggression. As explained by Heiner Bastian: “The heroic gods of antiquity represent energy (libido) as a psychic entity which is variously and ambivalently expressed in the disposition of human nature: symbol of the antithesis between Mars and Venus, between sexual and aggressive impulses, between productivity and destruction.” (Heiner Bastian, Cy Twombly: Paintings 1952-1976 Volume I, Berlin 1978, p. 42) This is particularly evident in Twombly’s use in the present painting, not only of explicitly phallic references, violent gashes and scribbled-out phrases such as ‘The Sea’ - perhaps a reference to the Birth of Venus or Galatea - but also to the employment of numbers and trapeze-like shapes and rectangles, an allusion to the geometric shapes associated with the idealised female form of Praxiteles’ Aphrodite of Knidos. The present work connotes such a balance between male and female, destruction and creation through a pseudo-unconscious automatism: Twombly’s frantic erasures and explosive marks juxtapose phallic forms with breasts, buttocks and female organs. These cluster or wing-like shapes overworked with red crayon highlight signification of human form, as Bastian again explains: “He smears the colour on with his fingers or applies it directly from the tube onto the canvas as a physical act: colour becomes raw condition or ‘materia nuda’, human presence of gods and heroes like flesh and blood in pink and red.” (Ibid., p. 43) These highly corporeal and savage marks forge an extraordinary collusion between the gestural action painting of Abstract Expressionism and the erotic abandon of surrealism (Nicholas Cullinan and Xavier F. Salomon, ‘Venus and Eros’, in Exh. Cat., London, Dulwich Picture Gallery, Twombly and Poussin: Arcadian Painters, 2011, p. 113). Here the stuttering and violently fragmented deployment of gendered parts barely contained within the picture plane communicates a vision of classical Eros seen through the prism of modernity - the lack of hegemony and corporeal wholeness of which are irrefutable visual signals for the evisceration and loss of the classical ideal in art. Underscored with savage tales of passion rooted in the malicious jealousies found in Virgil, Ovid and Sappho, the Crimes of Passion I delivers a masterful cross-pollination of Apollonian erudition and Dionysian abandon via Twombly’s utterly groundbreaking visual codex.