Press | Phillips

11 February 2020

Phillips Announces Highlights for First New York Auction of 2020

 

 

Phillips Announces Highlights for

First New York Auction of 2020

                              

New Now Sale on 4 March Features Works by Peter Halley, Ed Clark,

Noah Davis, Kerry James Marshall, Njideka Akunyi Crosby, and More

 

 

Jonathan Gardner

Daisy, 2014

Estimate: $20,000-30,000

 

 

Noah Davis

In Search of Gallerius Maximumianus, 2009

Estimate: $60,000-80,000

 

 

Ebony G. Patterson

Untitled Species I, 2010-2011

Estimate: $15,000-20,000

 

 

NEW YORK - 11 FEBRUARY 2020 – Phillips is pleased to announce highlights from the first New York auction of 2020, New Now on Wednesday, 4 March.  The sale will feature nearly 200 works spanning the 20th and 21st centuries, showcasing a wide breadth of creative output from large scale painting to intimate drawings that span multiple genres including figuration, still-life, and abstraction.  Highlights include works by emerging artists alongside more established names such as Ebony G. Patterson, Jonathan Lyndon Chase, Noah Davis, and Jonathan Gardner, as well as Peter Halley, Ed Clark, Njideka Akunyi Crosby, and Alex Katz among others.

 

“I’m thrilled to present this extraordinary group of works from top artists in 20th century and contemporary art alongside emerging artists,” states Samuel Mansour, Head of New Now, New York.  “The New Now sales have come to be viewed as a bellwether of the market and, on the heels of our record breaking sale in September, we are confident that the momentum will continue into 2020. We are pleased to present such a great selection of fresh to market material, including Ed Clark’s Untitled (Acrylic #1) from his Louisiana series and Ebony G. Patterson’s Untitled Species I, as well as iconic works by the likes of Julian Schnabel and Noah Davis who is currently showing at David Zwirner. New Now embodies a forward thinking approach to collecting that resonates with our clients and remains a key growth category for Phillips.” 

 

 

Ed Clark

Untitled (Acrylic #1) from the series Louisiana, 1978

Estimate: $200,000-300,000

 

Among the top lots of the sale is Ed Clark’s Untitled (Acrylic #1) from the Louisiana series of 1978. The work is the largest and one of the earliest paintings by Clark ever to come to auction.  Employing his signature technique of translating a place into abstract form and color, Clark captures the beauty of returning to his home state of Louisiana.  The canvas is comprised of three distinct sections – seemingly representative of the earth, air, and water of the Delta region – that also meld together, evoking the ways in which the Delta can seemingly be all three at once.  This auction marks the first time that the work is being offered, after having been gifted by the artist  to the present owner.

 

 

 

 

Kerry James Marshall

Preliminary Sketch for Black Painting, 2002

Estimate: $30,000-40,000

 

Two preparatory works on paper that explore themes of identity through intimacy and the black American experience will also be offered in March – Kerry James Marshall’s Preliminary Sketch for Black Painting, 2002, and Njideka Akunyili Crosby’s Untitled, 2011.  In an effort to rectify the absence of black subjects in Western art history, these artists introduce new figures with intimate narratives and complex social motifs. In Marshall’s work, a precursor to his thought-provoking Black Painting, which is in the permanent collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, he displays a couple under the warmth of their covers. However, underlying this romantic scene, Marshall illustrates a December night in 1969 when Chicago Police invaded the home of the former chairman of Illinois’ Black Panther Party and subsequently murdered him and his pregnant wife. Unarmed and vulnerable, this couple represents the common mistreatment of black Americans – even in the most unlikely and secure of spaces.

 

 

Njideka Akunyili Crosby

Untitled, 2011

Estimate: $40,000-60,000

 

Refusing to accept invisibility, Njideka Akunyili Crosby’s work readily showcases her own personal experience as a Nigerian immigrant living in America. The interior setting in Untitled, 2011, depicts the artist and her husband making love as her bolded black silhouette hovers over his abstracted white-skinned posterior. Parallel to Marshall’s persistence in carving out a place for black figures in art history, Crosby attempts to extinguish persisting and destructive stereotypes about African Americans. Through sensitive and personal representation, she encourages the education and understanding of different cultures.

 

 

 

 

 

Ebony G. Patterson

Untitled Species I, 2010-2011

Estimate: $15,000-20,000

 

Ebony G. Patterson’s Untitled Species I hails from her seminal Species series (2020-2011), which explores concepts such as the transformation of the body and gender through the lens of Jamaican dancehall culture. Untitled Species I  presents a glitter-encrusted male portrait, investigating the ways in which young black men shape their identity within Jamaican culture. Patterson boldly references skin bleaching, a century-spanning fashion in Jamaica, as well as addresses ideas on gender norms with her use of glitter and rhinestones, in addition to the painted red lips and floral embellishments used.  The painting has been exhibited at the Studio Museum and The Perez Art Museum.

 

 

Jonathan Lyndon Chase

Untitled, 2016

Estimate: $10,000-15,000

 

Executed in 2016, Jonathan Lyndon Chase’s Untitled tackles his personal struggle to accept his identity as a queer black man in America. Chase’s figures are simple, beautiful and confrontational, exploring ways in which traditional notions of masculinity are being challenged and overturned.  Chase’s compositions are comprised of black queer men that Chase incorporates to create a compositional fantasy informed by his own life experiences, pornography, books, social media, and dreams. The multi-limbed figure in his Untitled painting squats square up to the viewer but looking askance demanding to be recognized while refusing to present a definitive reading. Chase’s portraits challenge the viewer to reconsider the underlying systems that have been internalized as “established norms” by society for too long.

 

 

Jonathan Gardner’s Daisy, painted in 2014, pays homage to 20th century references, including surrealist absurdity and cubist deconstruction in a decidedly contemporary and engaging composition.  Depicting an inverted female bust hovering over a singular potted flower, Daisy illustrates how Gardner melds the influences of his canonical predecessors to form his own imminently recognizable and stunning aesthetic. Drawing from such influences as Matisse’s cut-outs and Magritte’s distinct objects in surreal interiors, Daisy distorts the viewer’s perception of a narrative within the composition.  His ability to synthesize a contemporary figurative aesthetic in  the 21st century illustrates the persistent interest in the manner in which viewers (and an artist) perceive representational art and with it their own natural world.

 

 

 
 

Jonathan Gardner

Daisy, 2014

Estimate: $20,000-30,000

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Additional Highlights

 

 

Alex Katz

Untitled (Still Life), circa 1955

Estimate: $50,000-70,000

 

Peter Halley

Nowhere, 1992

Estimate: $250,000-350,000

 

 

Pat Steir

The Wave (after Courbet, as though painted by an Italian Baroque Painter), 1986

Estimate: $120,000-180,000

 

 

Julian Schnabel

Angela, 1982

Estimate: $70,000-100,000

 

 

Nicolas Party

Untitled (Landscape), 2013

Estimate: $60,000-80,000

 

 

Richard Prince

Untitled (Nurse), 2008

Estimate: $100,000-150,000

       

 Auction: 4 March 2020

Auction viewing: 24 February-3 March 2020

Location: 450 Park Avenue, New York

Click here for more information:  https://www.phillips.com/auctions/auction/NY010120

                   

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Phillips is a leading global platform for buying and selling 20th and 21st century art and design. With dedicated expertise in the areas of 20th Century and Contemporary Art, Design, Photographs, Editions, Watches, and Jewelry, Phillips offers professional services and advice on all aspects of collecting. Auctions and exhibitions are held at salerooms in New York, London, Geneva, and Hong Kong, while clients are further served through representative offices based throughout Europe, the United States and Asia. Phillips also offers an online auction platform accessible anywhere in the world.  In addition to providing selling and buying opportunities through auction, Phillips brokers private sales and offers assistance with appraisals, valuations, and other financial services.

Visit www.phillips.com for further information.

 

*Estimates do not include buyer’s premium; prices achieved include the hammer price plus buyer’s premium.

 

PRESS CONTACT: Jaime Israni, Senior Public Relations Manager               jisrani@phillips.com                   +1 212 940 1398

 

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