- 34
本·尼克森
描述
- Ben Nicholson
- 《62年8月(馬基亞山谷)》
- 款識:藝術家簽名並題款(背面)
- 油彩,經裁切畫板
- 20 x 21 1/4 英寸
- 50.8 x 53.9 公分
45 by 60cm.
Executed in 1962.
來源
São Schlumberger
Thence by descent to the present owner
拍品資料及來源
Ben Nicholson, 1968
In 1958 Ben Nicholson left St. Ives, the Cornish fishing town and artists’ colony which had been his home in Britain for over twenty years, for Ticino, the southern-most canton in Switzerland. The move occasioned a remarkably productive period for Nicholson and, as Norman Reid notes, his work took on a new range and confidence: "The uncompromising breadth and statement which had informed the major works of the thirties, and which had not been so evident in the more generally linear works of the forties and early fifties, returned to his art. […] The works of this period rely less upon the tension of Nicholson’s line and the elegance of his composition and more upon his ability to concentrate experience in the discovery of form. […] They convey the essence of landscapes as the artist has experienced them and their mood as he has recalled it" (Norman Reid, ‘Introduction’ in Ben Nicholson (exhibition catalogue), The Tate Gallery, London, 1969, pp. 53-55).
The present work epitomizes the mature, balanced style of the artist’s 1960s work. In AUG 62 (Valle Maggia), Nicholson's abiding preoccupation with the natural world and his joy in his new surroundings is evident. He revels in the use of naturalistic color, rare for an ambitious abstract work at the time. Nicholson saw colors as revealed in the qualities of a particular light and in the present work he particularizes the vital transition between the strip of blue, a block of silvery-grey and the richer levels beneath, as if one’s gaze had changed focus between light over water and light over land.
The new home environment and Nicholson’s more extensive travel program had made their mark on his art of the period and, as is the case for the present work, many works refer to a particular place in their subtitles. At times it is a specific form or relationship of forms the words refer to; more often they indicate a broader response, to space, mass, light. As Nicholson himself expressed at the time of his move: "The landscape is superb, especially in winter and when seen from the changing levels of the mountain side - the persistent sunlight, the bare trees seen against a translucent lake, the hard, rounded forms of the snow-topped mountains, and perhaps with a late evening moon rising beyond in a pale, cerulean sky - is entirely magical and with the kind of visual poetry which I would like to find in my paintings" (S. A. Nash, Ben Nicholson Fifty Years of his Art (exhibition catalogue), Albright-Knox Art Gallery, New York, p. 38).