- 3
韋德·蓋頓
描述
- Wade Guyton
- 《無題》
- 款識:藝術家簽名並紀年2007(畫布側邊)
- 噴墨打印麻布
- 213.4 x 175.3 公分;84 x 69 英寸
來源
Acquired directly from the above by the present owner in 2007
Condition
"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."
拍品資料及來源
On the occasion of his critically acclaimed 2012-13 retrospective at the Whitney Museum of American Art, the artist declared, “When I started to be interested in making art, all the artists I was interested in were involved in the manipulation of language or the malleability of the categories of art. There was a freedom in this way of thinking. There was a space where objects could be speculative” (Wade Guyton quoted in: Exhibition Catalogue, New York, Whitney Museum of American Art, Wade Guyton OS, 2012-13, p. 11). Though strictly without material precedent, Wade Guyton’s practice inevitably extends a grand tradition of conceptual reassessment regarding themes of authorship and appropriation that were variously investigated in the Twentieth Century by the likes of Marcel Duchamp, Robert Rauschenberg, Andy Warhol, Joseph Kosuth, Sol LeWitt, John Baldessari, Richard Prince and Christopher Wool. Guyton’s enquiry not only challenges the boundaries of painting and the objectification of art, but also the nature of visual communication itself. As definitively demonstrated by Untitled, his works reveal themselves as a product of mechanical reproduction, reflecting his use of commercial inkjet printers. These compositions are conceived on a computer and executed on a printer, an approach instigated in 2000 when he overlaid various found imagery from exhibition catalogues, monographs and architecture magazines with black Xs, a process both implicating and undermining the reproduced image in the our contemporary era.
In 2006, Guyton transferred from paper sheets to reams of linen, feeding vast swathes of fabric through an Epson Stylus Pro 9600 ink-jet printer in his Thirty-eighth Street studio in New York. In order to fit the linen into the printer, which is forty-four inches wide, he folded it in half, executing one side and then the other so that the compositions became vertically bisected by a central empty seam. As exemplified in the present work, the resultant X form necessarily became fractionally interrupted and disconnected. Whereas Guyton’s earlier X paintings consisted of multiplied and repeated small X characters, in the critical year of 2007, when the present work was created, these were superseded by a single large X. Unlike his previous work, which consisted mostly of flames, narrow stripes and the small Xs, the single large X draws much greater attention to the central vertical division dictated by the physical limitations of the printer.
This was a crucial conceptual transformation in Guyton’s practice, and instigated a line of enquiry that he pursued in his art for the subsequent five years. As John Kelsey described Guyton’s method in 2007, “Sending these pages through a desktop printer, interrupting them with his programmed marks, the artist intervened directly within the mediation of artistic practice, discourse and value….And as the painter or printer elaborates ways of using that somehow remain out of reach or blind to the author, he also learns to displace himself with a strange ease between discourse and design, communication and image…The artist intervenes where the production of communication by means of communication happens, in the black of the font and in the sending of the image” (John Kelsey in: Exhibition Catalogue, New York, Friedrich Petzel Gallery, Wade Guyton, 2007, n.p.).