Oct 18, 2018 - Sale 2489

Sale 2489 - Lot 164

Unsold
Estimate: $ 40,000 - $ 60,000
AARON SISKIND (1903-1991)
Suite of 50 original photographs, with 30 bold abstractions, 2 sublime floating figures, architectural studies and more. Silver prints, the images measuring 8 3/4x9 1/2 to 14x11 inches (22.2x24.1 to 35.6x27.9 cm.), and the reverse, the sheets 14x11 inches (35.6x27.9 cm.), two with Siskind's signature, in ink, on recto; the remaining with his signature, title, and date, in pencil, and inventory notations, also in pencil, in an unknown hand, on verso. Circa 1938-80; printed 1970s-80

Additional Details

Acquired directly from Aaron Siskind; to a Private New York Collector, 1980.

NC (North Carolina) (1951) Providence 51 (1972) Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation 37 (1953) Pleasures and Terrors of Levitation 60 (1956) F 133 (feet) (1958) Coatzacoalcos, Mexico 9 (1973) Jalapa 66 (1974) Rome 30 (1967) Providence 100 (1972) N.Y. 1 (1951) N.Y. 2 (1951) Chicago 7 (1960) Chicago 29 (1952) Bronx 1 (1950) Chicago 22 (1949) SW2 (seaweed) (1944) SW 12 (seaweed) (1953) Lima 224 (1979) Chicago 18 (1949) Kentucky 4 (1954) Wickenburg, AR 2 (1949) N.Y. 1 (1947) Bandlands [sic] 60 (1970) Kentucky 4 (1951) San Luis Potosi 16 (1961) Celaya 1 (1955) Durango 8 (1961) Chicago 224 (1953) Gloucester 1 (1944) Gloucester 3 (1945) Gloucester 6 (1944) Uruapan 11 (1955) Chicago 10 (1954) Chicago 27 (1960) Acolman, Mex. 2 (1955) Olmec, Villahermosa (1973) Uruapan 9 (1955) Guadalajara 21 (1961) The Tree 2 (1972) The Tree 3 (1973) Lima 89 (Homage to F.K.) (1975) Lima 12 (1980) Iquitos 139 (1980) Volcano 106 (1980) End of the Civl Rep. Th. 1 (ca. 1938) Chilmark 28 (1972) M.V. 4 (Martha's Vineyard) (1950) M.V. 6 (1950) M.V. 107 (1954) M.V. 111B (1954).

Siskind was an exuberant artist who was influenced by artistic currents associated with Abstract Expressionist painters. He was interested in translating how objects and materials associated with everyday life could be seen as powerful photographic symbols. Focusing his attention on textured walls, fragments of graffiti, popular signage, repetition in architecture, and silhouetted organic forms, Siskind posited a universally recognizable pictorial vocabulary. He traveled extensively throughout New York, New England, Chicago, North Carolina, Kentucky, Arizona, Peru, Mexico, and Italy discovering the pleasures of the quotidian, which he elevated into unprecedented aesthetic expressions of personal creativity.


Kline's influence is readily apparent in these bold black-and-white abstract prints which, in the 1940s-50s, were groundbreaking explorations of an innovative form of photographic seeing. Siskind's ability to capture how such tropes and motifs were clearly transcultural underscores his character as a humanist.