拍品 34
  • 34

赫爾文·安德森

估價
250,000 - 350,000 GBP
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招標截止

描述

  • Hurvin Anderson
  • 《彼得理髮店顧客 3》
  • 款識:藝術家簽名、題款並紀年 (Jan) 2009(畫布側邊)
  • 油彩畫布
  • 187 x 147 公分;73 5/8 x 57 7/8 英寸

來源

Thomas Dane Gallery, London

Acquired directly from the above by the present owner in 2009

展覽

London, Tate Britain, Art Now: Hurvin Anderson: Peter's Series 2007-2009, 2009 

Harlem, The Studio Museum, Hurvin Anderson, Peter’s Series 2007-2009, 2009

St. Petersburg, The State Hermitage Museum; and London, The Saatchi Gallery, Newspeak: British Art Now, 2009-10, p. 3, illustrated in colour and pp. 9-10, illustrated in colour (London catalogue) 

Adelaide, The Art Gallery of South Australia, British Art Today, 2011, p. 41, illustrated in colour 

Birmingham, Ikon Gallery, Hurvin Anderson: Reporting Back, 2013, p. 87, illustrated in colour

出版

Chris Gordon, 'Made in Britain', The St. Petersburg Times, No. 1522, 30 October 2009, illustrated in colour

Edward Booth-Clibborn, Ed., History of the Saatchi Gallery, London 2011, p. 814, illustrated in colour

Condition

Colour: The colour in the illustrated catalogue is fairly accurate, although there are more underlying green tonalities in the original. Condition: This work is in very good condition. No restoration is apparent when examined under ultra-violet light.
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拍品資料及來源

Transporting the viewer to the bygone era of 1950s Britain, Hurvin Anderson’s Peter’s Sitters 3 is a stunning example of the artist’s most important series to date: Peter’s Series. The perfect paragon of Anderson’s most desired artistic attributes, the present work masterfully oscillates between the formal traditions of abstraction and figuration, meditatively conjoining pluriform histories to create an utterly contemporary document of cross-culturalism. Born in England to parents of Jamaican descent, Anderson uses the complex mental landscapes of works such as Peter’s Sitters 3 to explore and make light of his own personal relationship with his Jamaican heritage. Figuring a makeshift barbershop in the attic of a new Caribbean immigrant’s home, Peter’s Sitters 3 reverberates with both the aspirations and realities that this new British identity brought. The great expanse of translucent cobalt blue veneers that comprise the floor recall the free open waters of the Caribbean sea, while the tonally brilliant, opaque walls and geometric furnishings awkwardly constrict this new found freedom. As such, the present work ingeniously captures the disorientated and displaced mental landscapes of Caribbean immigrants in an extraordinary and innovative manner. An extremely important work from this breakthrough group, Peter’s Series have formed the basis of the artist’s two major solo museum shows at Tate Britain (Art Now: Hurvin Anderson Peter’s Series 2007-2009, 2009) and in New York at The Studio Museum in Harlem (Hurvin Anderson: Peter’s Series 2007-2009, 2009).

According to Anderson the practice of converting a small attic into a barbershop or another type of social space was common amongst first wave Afro-Caribbeans when they arrived in Britain. Not only were these spaces where one could get their hair cut but they were places of entertainment, locales where communities could come together and socialise. As Anderson expands, “it is not only a personal space loaded with imagery, but it also bears the stamp of political, economic and social history” (Hurvin Anderson in conversation with Thelma Golden in: Exhibition Catalogue, London, Tate Britain, Art Now: Hurvin Anderson Peter’s Series 2007-2009, 2009, n.p.). The barbershop imagined in Peter’s Sitters 3 is derived from a distinct memory that the artist has of picking his father up from a haircut one day. He at once became entranced by the magical presence of the room, as though it were a relic of a mysterious other land. It was only later when examining photographs of the attic that, “I realised that there was something about the figure in the chair and the whole nature of that intimate but shared space that was compelling and that I wanted to paint” (ibid.).

Not originally intended as a series, Anderson started Peter’s Series in 2007 with Peters I, which is held in the Government Art Collection, and Peter's II; richly detailed, textured records of the barbershop space that are void of figurative content. By Peters III, however, he had removed all the furniture in a painterly exercise that explored the very qualities of paint and space itself, creating a featureless abstracted blue room. Speaking of why he ended up creating eight renditions of this theme, the artist explained: “the barbershop became such a complex and ambiguous place that I felt compelled to return to it again and again” (ibid.). Not initially ready at the beginning of the series to introduce the figurative, in the last three works of the group – Peter's Sitters 1, Peter's Sitters 2, which is held in the Zabludowicz Collection, and Peter’s Sitters 3 – Anderson turned his brush to address the relationship between the barbershop client and the viewer. To designate that these last three works included figures, and to contrast the earlier 'Peters' works which denoted the empty space of the barber shop, Anderson altered their names to include the word 'Sitters' alongside 'Peter's'. Achieving full figuration in the present and final work of the series, the customer is pictured hunched over in the barber’s chair, “it had become clear to me [by Peter’s Sitters 3] that the customer had become the central subject of the paintings” (ibid.). Scattered around the figure we see tufts of the client’s clipped hair that appear to melt into the cobalt carpet and figuration appears to turn back into abstraction once more.