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| Artist:
Peter Doig |
| Title: Concrete Cabin
West Side
|
| Lot: 7 |
Oil/Canvas |
Low Est.: |
$3,124,400 |
(£2,000,000) |
| Created: 1993 |
Signed and
Titled |
High Est.: |
$4,686,600 |
(£3,000,000) |
| Size: 78.54"
x 108.27" (199.50cm x 275cm) |
Sales
Price:** |
$3,213,840 |
(£2,057,250) |
| Auction House:
Christie's London,
King Street
02/11/2010 |
|
Provenance:
Victoria Miro Gallery, London. Acquired from the above
by the present owner in 1994.
Exhibitions:
London, Victoria Miro Gallery, Concrete Cabins,
January-February 1994. London, Tate Gallery, The Turner
Prize 1994, November-December 1994, no. 3 (illustrated
in colour, unpaged). Salzburg, Max Gandolph-Bibliothek,
Prize Eliette von Karajan: Peter Doig, 1994. This
exhibition later travelled to Vienna, Herbert von
Karajan Centrum, 1994. Kiel, Kunsthalle, Peter Doig
Blizzard Seventy-Seven, March-April 1998, no. 10
(illustrated in colour, p. 89). This exhibition later
travelled to Nurenberg, Kunsthalle, April-June 1998 and
London, Whitechapel Art Gallery, June-August 1998.
Maastricht, Bonnefantenmuseum, Peter Doig, Charley's
Space, May-September 2003 (illustrated in colour,
unpaged). This exhibition later travelled to Nîmes,
Carré d'Art, Musée d'art contemporain, October
2003-January 2004.
Notes:
'His [Doig's] best work occupies some uneasy space
between anecdote and abstract; it never lets you forget
either its reference in the real world, nor its
painterly surface. Alongside his canoe pictures, the
best expression of this is perhaps his Concrete Cabin
series, made in 1994, which also casts light on some of
his recurring preoccupations.' (T. Adams, 'Record
Painter', The Observer, 27 January 2008). Executed on a
grand, panoramic scale, the sublimely atmospheric scene
of Concrete Cabin West Side represents arguably the
greatest example of Peter Doig's most famous and
extensive series of paintings of Le Corbusier's master
project: Unit d'Habitation de Briey-en- Forêt. A series
which Doig began in 1991 and which occupied him for most
of the 1990s, three of the Concrete Cabins including the
present work, formed the backbone of his 1994 Turner
Prize installation at the Tate and the series was also
given a room to itself in his recent touring
retrospective. The current owner acquired the work
during a visit to Doig's studio in advance of his first
exhibition of the series at Victoria Miro Gallery,
London in 1994 and chose this work from the entire
content of the show. Throughout the series, we are
witness to one of the most renowned architectural and
utopian follies of the twentieth century, a vast urban
edifice glanced at through the foliage which has begun
to consume it. These are images of the battle between
nature and the man-made, between abstraction and
figuration, and the paint itself becomes a metaphor for
the passing of time. What sets this work apart from the
others in the series, is that unlike most of the rest of
the works which are set further into the woods, here we
have a totally unique viewpoint, up close and right at
the ground floor entrance to the building, on the
threshold of the battle. Only one other work gets as
close, Concrete Cabin II, and both paintings deploy an
incredible range of painterly techniques and surfaces,
alongside the gorgeous symphony of the linear
perspective which peels away from the frontality of the
trees; at its most basic the hard geometric perspectival
line and colour of Modernism against the controlled
painterly chromatic veils and Abstract Expressionism
which depicts the foliage. It is only with this
proximity to the building that we encounter the unique
collision between the blinding light of the building
being glanced at so directly through the brooding
darkness of the forest. Thus the work manages to combine
a unique handling of the painterly processes and
philosophies of art history as a profound metaphor for
our social existence. The love affair with this subject
began in 1991 during Doig's brief visit to Unit
d'Habitation de Briey-en-Fort in northeast France. This
seminal and much debated building was one of a small
group around Europe completed by Le Corbusier with the
collaboration of the painter architect, Nadir Afonso
between 1947-1965 and which came to transform the way
living quarters were organised in the Post-War period.
Based on the Soviet Communal Housing project, the
Narkomfin building in Moscow, these buildings,
constructed in concrete, incorporated a complex
interchange of internalised 'vertical cities' to allow
for a complete way of life in one building. However what
once appeared to be the ultimate futuristic utopia
gradually became seen as architectural folly and Doig's
vision is one of the passing of Modernism and by
extension, the passing of time itself. Where Le
Corbusier set the Unit among woodland to create the
ideal meeting between nature and culture, Doig invests
the architecture with a sense of loss and foreboding, in
the ultimate Post-Modern painting.Doig had seen the Unit
d'Habitation while travelling through France, and the
distinctly complex and sombre tone of the painting was
in part informed by his experiences there, marking it
out from his earlier pictures of buildings: 'Visiting
the building in Briey, seeing the way it was situated
there in the forest reminded me of much more modest
buildings I had painted, but I ended up painting it as
well, probably in quite a different way than I had
painted other structures ... Whereas other buildings had
represented a family or maybe a person somehow, this
building seemed to represent thousands of people. When I
went to see the Le Corbusier building for the first
time, I never dreamed that I would end up painting it. I
went for walk in the woods on one visit, and as I was
walking back I suddenly saw the building anew. I had no
desire to paint it on its own, but seeing it through the
trees, that is when I found it striking' (Doig, quoted
in A. Searle, K. Scott & C. Grenier, Peter Doig, London,
2007, p. 16). It is telling that Doig later explained
that it was less the experience of seeing the building
than that of seeing it in reproduction that inspired him
to create Concrete Cabin West Side and its sister
pictures. 'The building took me by surprise as a piece
of architecture,' he said. 'But it was not until I saw
the photographs I had taken of the building through the
trees that it became interesting. That made me go back
and look at it again. I was surprised by the way the
building transformed itself from a piece of architecture
into a feeling. It was all emotion suddenly' (Doig,
quoted in T. Adams, 'Record Painter', The Observer, 27
January 2008). In this way, the image has undergone a
series of transformations, from the actual edifice in
the landscape, to the small snapshot, to this huge
painting. The work is a very large scale painting of a
photographic snapshot and Doig emphasises this by
reproducing the globules of paint which gathered on the
photograph as it sat around his studio, creating a
further layer in the compositional equation, which
includes the building itself, the foliage in front of it
and the surface of the photograph itself. A complex
sequence of separations has been placed between the
viewer and the building, emphasising the artist's own
physical efforts in creating this painting. As Doig has
commented: 'Sometimes paint gets spilled or sprayed on
them, and it adds an unexpected layer that you can then
refer to. The reality of the original feels less
constricting, and this provides an opening. It takes the
reality away from the photograph and turns it into a
more abstract image' (Doig, quoted in Searle, Scott &
Grenier, op. cit., 2007, p. 14). When studied up close,
the thick chalky white lines which construct the
building as it disappears through the painting, can
actually be glanced through the tree layers. Where
Gustav Klimt has tackled this kind of subject matter in
works such as Oberosterreiches Bauernhaus, 1911-1912,
his focus was more on the light and the integration of
foliage with the house behind it. Working on a much
larger scale, in Concrete Cabin West Side, Doig is more
focused on the painterly vocabulary. The hard edged
surface and exacting perfection of the crisp modules of
Modernist colour collides directly with the intricate
veils and gorgeous translucency of the turquoise, yellow
and red which shimmer between the tree branches in the
right, centre and left of the painting respectively.
Gerhard Richter-like abstract brush strokes, executed in
one single journey down the canvas, define the
composition of the trees and thick globules of spattered
and spilled paint fleck the surface, reminding one of
Francis Bacon's regular controlled outbursts in front of
the canvas. The rare proximity to the building that we
have in this painting, allows us to view the ground just
in front of it as the sunlight hits it, allowing for
this sublime depiction of atmospheric light. With the
grand scale, one feels actually present in front of the
scene as if emerging from a dense forest to the light at
the end of the tunnel. Like Richter, Doig is exploring
the entire notion, or validity, of painting by exploring
its very vocabulary. Doig, though, is immersed, he is
subjective, his picture is filled with mood and the
aroma of faded nostalgias, as though we were leafing
through a stranger's photo album: it is this poignant
and potent sense of mystery that results in the
incredible lyricism and atmosphere that characterize his
greatest works. As he himself has said, he is 'trying to
find images that have some sort of resonance rather than
meaning' (Doig, quoted in Peter Doig: Charley's Space,
exh.cat., Maastricht & Nmes, 2003, p. 31).
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