Rudolf Stingel - 20th Century & Contemporary Art Evening Sale London Sunday, June 26, 2016 | Phillips

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  • Provenance

    Massimo De Carlo, Milan
    Acquired from the above by the present owner

  • Catalogue Essay

    The radicalness of Stingel’s Cellotex panels is often underestimated. While rejecting any suggestion of being a social, political or conceptual gesture, these works may be some of the most open and brave moments in recent contemporary art production. As with his provocative instruction book on how to make his paintings, Stingel once again gives himself and his work, in their totality, to the public and the viewer. He invites the viewer inside the surface of his work, and allows anyone to make a 'contribution' to it. The critical voice of the viewer becomes part of the work. Like magnetic tape, the artist records the viewer’s reaction to his work – not simply verbally, but physically.

    If previously, Stingel suggested that anybody can make his paintings by carefully following instructions, he accepts through the Cellotex works that his work can also be a bare blackboard that allows people to vent various individual and collective ideas, desires, expressions or frustrations. The work is transformed into a vessel with which the audience can say whatever it is they need to say. The Cellotex works are like pages of a notebook, or a guestbook where one can complain or express satisfaction, not simply about the artist’s work, but about anything one wishes - from the museum curator’s, to the quality of the food in the cafeteria. Stingel’s work is a self-conscious affirmation of the banality of painting. The more banal a painting, the more liberating it will be.

    Stingel pushes Fontana’s gesture further and beyond. His work cannot be rejected by the viewer because the viewer is participating in it, is the co-author of the work. That’s why this Cellotex from 2002 is a turning point in the history of contemporary painting. Nobody before Stingel has been able to maintaining the value of authorship and at the same time question it so radically. Cy Twombly’s practice was a major step into a kind of indulgence into the mechanic gesture but Stingel stretched this idea, absorbing the individuality of each viewer.

    Offering the pristine silver surface to the emotional instinct of any viewer is both an act of total defiance and of absolute courage. The embracing power of Jeff Koons shiny colored stainless steel finds in Stingel’s Cellotex room to work its final closure. The viewer does not simply enter the work through the reflecting surface, but they do physically and almost sexually. The Cellotex are not about the power of images but about the power of creating both images and signifiers.

    Francesco Bonami

  • Artist Biography

    Rudolf Stingel

    Italian • 1956

    Rudolf Stingel came to prominence in the late 1980s for his insistence on the conceptual act of painting in a context in which it had been famously declared dead. Despite the prevailing minimalist and conceptual narrative of the time, the Italian-born artist sought to confront the fundamental aspirations and failures of Modernist painting through the very medium of painting itself. While his works do not always conform to the traditional definitions of painting, their attention to surface, space, color and image provide new and expanded ways of thinking about the process and "idea" of painting. Central to his multifarious and prolific oeuvre is an examination of the passage of time and the probing of the fundamental questions of authenticity, meaning, hierarchy, authorship and context by dislocating painting both internally and in time and space. Stingel is best known for his wall-to-wall installations, constructed of fabric or malleable Celotex sheets, as well as his seemingly more traditional oil-on-canvas paintings.

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Untitled (Topolino)

2002
Celotex insulation board, wood and aluminum
244 x 240.5 cm (96 1/8 x 94 5/8 in.)
Signed and dated 'Rudolf Stingel 2002' on the reverse.

This work is accompanied by a gallery certificate of authenticity.

Estimate
£700,000 - 1,000,000 

Sold for £905,000

Contact Specialist
Peter Sumner
Head of Contemporary Art, London
+44 207 318 4063

20th Century & Contemporary Art Evening Sale

London Auction 27 June 2016