詳情
LYNETTE YIADOM-BOAKYE (B. 1977)
Liberation Two-Piece
signed with the artist's initials, titled and dated ‘LYB 2013 Liberation Two-Piece’ (on the reverse)
oil on canvas
78¾ x 51⅛in. (200 x 130cm.)
Painted in 2013
來源
Corvi-Mora, London.
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2013.
展覽
London, Corvi-Mora, Lynette Yiadom-Boakye; The Love Without, 2013.
特別通告
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.
Please refer to the storage and collection terms as set out in the terms and conditions.
Please note this lot is the property of a consumer. See H1 of the Conditions of Sale.
榮譽呈獻

拍品專文

Lynette Yiadom-Boakye’s works abound with art-historical echoes. They have the gravity and grace of society portraits by John Singer Sargent; their shadows play with the chiaroscuro drama of Goya and Caravaggio; the loosely-worked yet intense presence of her figures, often emerging from unadorned pictorial space, recalls the alla prima directness of Édouard Manet. Indeed, like Manet, Yiadom-Boakye works swiftly, completing each of her paintings in a single day. She depicts not real subjects but composites: dreamlike characters removed from space and time into the unique space of painting, and loaded with enigmatic hints at wider stories beyond what we can see.

As Zadie Smith has written, ‘Yiadom-Boakye is doing more than exploring the supposedly uncharted territory of black selfhood, or making – in that hackneyed phrase – the invisible visible. (Black selfhood has always existed and is not invisible to black people.) Nor are these paintings solely concerned with inserting the black figure into an overwhelmingly white canon … The strongest paintings pursue an entirely different relation: not the narrow point-for-point argument between artist and art history but the essential, living communication between art work and viewer, a relationship that Yiadom-Boakye reminds us is indeed vicarious, voyeuristic, ambivalent, and fundamentally uncontrollable’ (Z. Smith, ‘Lynette Yiadom-Boakye’s Imaginary Portraits,’ The New Yorker, 19 June 2017).

Painted in 2013, the year that Yiadom-Boakye was nominated for the Turner Prize, Liberation Two-Piece exemplifies the artist’s deft Old Masterly touch. An elegant male figure, wearing a red tunic top and leggings that lend him the aspect of a dancer or stage actor, stands in a shimmering space of fluid, golden brushstrokes. He gazes thoughtfully off to the side, perhaps at action taking place outside the picture, or perhaps lost in his own interior world. Yiadom-Boakye writes short stories as well as painting, and inflects her art with a certain literary intrigue: Liberation Two-Piece is open rather than closed, and alive with a magical sense of narrative that remains tantalisingly untold.

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