Sale: 548 / Contemporary Art Day Sale, Dec. 08. 2023 in Munich Lot 194

 

194
Andy Warhol
Details of Renaissance Paintings (Sandro Botticelli, Birth of Venus, 1482), 1984.
Silkscreen in colors
Estimate:
€ 40,000 / $ 44,000
Sold:
€ 127,000 / $ 139,700

(incl. surcharge)
Details of Renaissance Paintings (Sandro Botticelli, Birth of Venus, 1482). 1984.
Silkscreen in colors.
Feldman/Schellmann/Defendi II.319. Signed and numbered. From an edition of 70 copies. On firm wove paper. 63.5 x 94 cm (25 x 37 in). Sheet: 82 x 112 cm (32,3 x 44,1 in).
Sheet 4 from the portfolio of a total of 4 color silkscreens. Printed by Rupert Jasen Smith, New York. Published by the Editions Schellman & Klüser, Munich/New York (with the stamp on the reverse). [JS].

• Warhol declares Botticelli's Renaissance icon "Birth of Venus" (Uffizi Gallery, Florence) an icon of Pop Art.
• Warhol is a master of adaptation and alienation: strongly focused image detail, intense Pop Art color and execution in several color variations.
• By confronting Renaissance with the present, uniqueness with serial reproduction, aura with adaptation, Warhol challenges our traditional notions of art and creates a fascinating allegory of his new concept of art.
• Warhol's artistic exploration of Sandro Botticelli's "Birth of Venus" (Uffizi Gallery, Florence) is the most famous sheet in the series of works "Details of Renaissance Paintings" based on masterpieces by Piero della Francesca, Paulo Uccello and Leonardo da Vinci.
• Part of a German private collection since its creation
.

PROVENANCE: Edition Schellmann & Klüser, New York/Munich (publisher).
Private collection Germany (acquired from the above in 1984, ever since family-owned).

LITERATURE: Forty are better than one. Edition Schellmann, 1969-2009, ed. by Jörg Schellmann, p. 345, Warhol, cat. no. 14 (fig., presumably different copy).
"The other day a company wanted to buy my aura. These people did not want a "product" from me, but said: >>We want your aura.<<. I didn't get what they really wanted. But they were willing to pay a lot for it. So I thought, if someone wants to pay that much money for something, I should take the trouble to find out what it could be."
Andy Warhol, quoted from: Andy Warhol. Die Philosophie des Andy Warhol von A nach B und zurück, Munich 1991, p. 73.

With his famous artistic adaptation of Sandro Botticelli's "Birth of Venus" (1482, Uffizi Gallery, Florence), Warhol defined, in the tradition of Walter Benjamin, an artistic new beginning and thus the end of traditional art. In 1936, the art-historically important essay "Reflexion und Aura. Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner technischen Reproduzierbarkeit" (Reflection and Aura: The Work of Art in the Age of Its Technical Reproducibility) was published by the philosopher and art critic Walter Benjamin. Benjamin lamented the progressive decline of the auratic through the new possibilities of technical reproduction and thus an increasing devaluation of the artistic original. According to Benjamin, the ubiquitous reception possibilities of art, through photography and film, heralded the end of traditional art. In America, Benjamin's theses of an artistic avant-garde were made public in early 1969 through Hannah Arendt’s anthology "Illuminations. Walter Benjamnin: Essays and Reflections", which would become the basis of contemporary art-theoretical discourse. Warhol, the undisputed master of American pop art, however, made everything that Benjamin believed would signify the end of art his artistic trademark: Warhol’s art is serial, striking and, through the use of photo-based silkscreen printing, negates not only the claim to originality but at the same time to a manual execution. This way Warhol liberated art from the shackles of aura. [JS]



194
Andy Warhol
Details of Renaissance Paintings (Sandro Botticelli, Birth of Venus, 1482), 1984.
Silkscreen in colors
Estimate:
€ 40,000 / $ 44,000
Sold:
€ 127,000 / $ 139,700

(incl. surcharge)