Details
Georges Vantongerloo (1886-1965)
Fonction de courbes
signed, titled, inscribed and dated ‘Fonction de courbes Paris 1939 G. Vantongerloo’ (on the reverse)
oil on masonite
61 x 52.5cm.
Painted in 1939
Provenance
Müller-Widmann, Basel.
Petzold-Müller, Basel.
Galerie Beyeler, Basel.
Galerie Lopes, Zurich.
Annely Juda, London,
Acquired from the above by the present owner in 1987.
Literature
Exh. cat., Georges Vantongerloo: A Traveling Retrospective Exhibition, Brussels 1980, no. 148 (illustrated, p. 120).
A. Thomas, Georges Vantongerloo, Zurich 1981, no. 148 (illustrated, p. 104).
Exh. cat., Georges Vantongerloo 1886-1965, Brussels 1981 (illustrated).
Exhibited
Zurich, Kunsthaus Zurich, Antoine Pevsner, Georges Vantongerloo, Max Bill, 1949.
Zurich, Galerie Lopes, 22 Paintings 1937-1949, 1977, no. 148.
London, Annely Juda Fine Art, From Figuration to Abstraction, 1986, no. 59 (illustrated, p. 101).
Special notice
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 note this lot is the property of a consumer. See H1 of the Conditions of Sale.
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Lot Essay

‘I have no scientific knowledge. Only my wonder stimulates my curiosity’ – Georges Vantongerloo

Painted in 1939, Georges Vantongerloo’s picture Fonction de courbes is a lyrical example of the artist’s distinctive expansion of the ideas of the De Stijl movement. Elegant, tapering brushstrokes materialise slender curves of green, red and brown before a clean white ground. Shifting away from the strict primary colours of his peer Piet Mondrian, Vantongerloo’s wider palette allowed him to explore the resonances and tensions between a harmonic range of different colours; during the 1930s, he had also moved beyond the straight-line geometries of his earlier works—many of them constructed according to algebraic formulae—towards a freer, more playful expression reflective of curved space, atomic energy and electromagnetic waves. These works were born of his growing fascination with cosmology and physics, which played a key part in scientific thought during the early twentieth century. Vantongerloo believed that his compositions presented reorganisations of reality, rather than inventions of a new reality: in this composition, he is reconfiguring the forces and particles that make up our visible world.
Vantongerloo had arrived in the Netherlands in 1914, a refugee from Belgium who had been injured during the opening months of the First World War. Four years later, he made contact with the artists involved in De Stijl. Approaching Theo van Doesburg with a view to publishing his essay ‘Science and Art’ in the group’s periodical, Vantongerloo quickly became absorbed into this radical group of thinkers, architects, painters and designers, marrying their groundbreaking theories and aesthetic with his personal explorations in abstraction. Particularly formative was the friendship he developed with Mondrian, whose writings on concrete art mirrored his own. While there are clear parallels between their compositions, Vantongerloo soon diverged from the older artist in his use of varied colours and forms, which vibrated through his paintings and sculptures alike. He later joined the Parisian group Cercle et Carré in 1930, and co-founded the collective Abstraction-Création in 1931; associating with contemporaries including László Moholy-Nagy, Wassily Kandinsky, Josef Albers and Robert and Sonia Delaunay, he was a true pioneer of abstract art committed to the constant evolution of his field. Vantongerloo’s ideas would come to be especially influential on the development of Neo-Concrete art in Latin America, which shared in the lively, phenomenological approach of his later works. While informed by scientific notions, Fonction de courbes sees his departure from a strict objective, rationalism towards a metaphysics of human wonder.

Post Lot Text

Angela Thomas Schmid has confirmed the authenticity of this work.

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