Sale 2630 - Lot 180
Price Realized: $ 1,200
Price Realized: $ 1,500
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 1,500 - $ 2,500
JEAN ARP
Vers le blanc infini.
Portfolio with complete text and 8 etchings with aquatint on Vélin de Rives, 1960. Each 372x285 mm; 14 3/8x11 1/4 inches (sheets), full margins, loose as issued.
Edition of 500. Signed in pencil and numbered "196" on the justification page. Printed by George LeBlanc, Paris. Published by La Rose des Vents, Lausanne and Paris. Original paste board folder and slip case. Very good impressions.
According to the Minneapolis Institute of Art, where there is another copy of this portfolio, "Arp [1886-1966] and Stanley Hayter [the influential master printer] first met in Paris in the mid-1920s, when both were active in French surrealist circles. Arp, who would become a prolific printmaker, was a regular visitor to [Hayter's] Atelier 17 in Paris and in later years in New York. He was also a founding member of Dada, a radical, anti-war cultural movement that began in Zürich, Switzerland in 1916. Arp's experiences with Surrealism and Dada helped cultivate an abiding interest in chance, word play, and reductive abstraction.
Arp's Vers le blanc infini features eight monochromatic etchings, each followed by one of his poems. To encourage unforeseen connections, he established an ambiguous relationship between the visual and the literary elements of the book, with images and poems appearing as unrelated independent expressions. Arp frequently restricted his palette to black and white as a way to amplify the textual associations in his work, stating: 'There is in me a certain need for communicating with human beings. Black and white equals writing.'" Arntz 405-12.
Vers le blanc infini.
Portfolio with complete text and 8 etchings with aquatint on Vélin de Rives, 1960. Each 372x285 mm; 14 3/8x11 1/4 inches (sheets), full margins, loose as issued.
Edition of 500. Signed in pencil and numbered "196" on the justification page. Printed by George LeBlanc, Paris. Published by La Rose des Vents, Lausanne and Paris. Original paste board folder and slip case. Very good impressions.
According to the Minneapolis Institute of Art, where there is another copy of this portfolio, "Arp [1886-1966] and Stanley Hayter [the influential master printer] first met in Paris in the mid-1920s, when both were active in French surrealist circles. Arp, who would become a prolific printmaker, was a regular visitor to [Hayter's] Atelier 17 in Paris and in later years in New York. He was also a founding member of Dada, a radical, anti-war cultural movement that began in Zürich, Switzerland in 1916. Arp's experiences with Surrealism and Dada helped cultivate an abiding interest in chance, word play, and reductive abstraction.
Arp's Vers le blanc infini features eight monochromatic etchings, each followed by one of his poems. To encourage unforeseen connections, he established an ambiguous relationship between the visual and the literary elements of the book, with images and poems appearing as unrelated independent expressions. Arp frequently restricted his palette to black and white as a way to amplify the textual associations in his work, stating: 'There is in me a certain need for communicating with human beings. Black and white equals writing.'" Arntz 405-12.
Exhibition Hours
Exhibition Hours
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