Lot 92
Lot 92
Sara VanDerBeek (b. 1976)

The Principle of Superimposition 2

Price Realised GBP 5,625
Estimate
GBP 3,000 - GBP 5,000
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Sara VanDerBeek (b. 1976)

The Principle of Superimposition 2

Price Realised GBP 5,625
Price Realised GBP 5,625
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Details
Sara VanDerBeek (b. 1976)
The Principle of Superimposition 2
c-print, in artist's frame
image: 6412 x 4412in. (164 x 113cm.)
overall: 6618 x 46in. (168 x 117cm.)
Executed in 2008, this work is number one from an edition of three plus two artist's proofs

Another from the edition is in the permanent collection of the ICA, Boston.
Provenance
The Approach, London.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2008.
Literature
G. Beck, 'Sara VanDerBeek' in Frieze, Issue 130, April 2010 (illustrated in colour).
Exhibited
London, The Approach, Sara VanDerBeek, The Principle of Superimposition, 2008.
London, Saatchi Gallery, Out of Focus: Photography, 2012.
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Brought to you by
Tessa Lord
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Lot Essay

American artist Sara VanDerBeek extends the legacy of the 1980s Pictures Generation, blurring the boundary between sculpture and photography in order to explore ideas about memory and transience. Her creations document delicate assemblages of found objects, photographs and artworks that she curates herself, paying careful attention to the relationship between images. In photographing these constructions, VanDerBeek transforms them into lost artefacts – now without physical reality – that survive only through the secondary records. Shown in the Saatchi Gallery’s exhibition Out of Focus: Photography in 2012, The Principle of Superimposition 2 (2008) is inspired by a folding screen designed by the architect Eileen Gray. The individual components are drawn from a wide range of sources, including fashion photographs by Erwin Blumenfield, an image of women in burkas from Time/Life, photograms from László Moholy Nagy’s Vision in Motion (1947), and a fifteenth-century Chinese ceramic vase spliced with a Leni Riefenstahl photograph. Trained at the Cooper Union, VanDerBeek has mounted solo shows at institutions including the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Museum Boijmans van Beuningen, Rotterdam and – last year – the Minneapolis Institute of Art. Her work is represented in most of America’s major museum collections, with another edition of the present work housed in the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston.
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Condition report

A Christie's specialist may contact you to discuss this lot or to notify you if the condition changes prior to the sale.