Georg Baselitz's Gebeugter Trinker, 1982 To

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Georg Baselitz's Gebeugter Trinker, 1982 To PRESS RELEASE | LONDON FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 5 JUNE 2 0 2 0 GEORG BASELITZ’S GEBEUGTER TRINKER, 1982 TO HIGHLIGHT LONDON LEG OF ONE: A GLOBAL AUCTION OF THE 20TH CENTURY “Standing within a long tradition of German art, and using time honoured media, Baselitz has striven constantly to confront the realities of history and art history to make the new and fresh in a manner that can only be described as heroic; heroic because his art has consciously gone against the grain of fashion, while always remaining modern”— Norman Rosenthal, Exhibitions Secretary, Royal Academy, London, 2007. LONDON – Christie’s is pleased to announce the first highlight of the London leg of One: a Global Auction of the 20th Century: Georg Baselitz’s Gebeugter Trinker, 1982 (estimate: GBP£4.5-6.5 million/ USD$6-8 million). Rendered in vibrant orange, Gebeugter Trinker is one of the largest examples from Baselitz’s iconic Drinkers series, and a prime example of the artist’s shift during a period of reexamination within his practice. “The '80s helped me to rearrange everything,” he noted, “I was able to set up a whole range of ideas and experiences anew, which meant I was able to break everything down so I could make something out of it again.” Already at odds with their orientation, the works that Baselitz executed up until the 1980s were tangentially related to both his Expressionist forebears and Abstract Expressionism. However, as he hit his stride, works like Gebeugter Trinker exhibit a wholehearted urge to seemingly disregard any former meticulousness in favor of a bold, radical approach to representation mixed with increasingly painterly strokes. Katharine Arnold, Co-Head of Post-War & Contemporary Art, Europe, remarked: “Hailing from one of the artist’s greatest periods and held within the same private collection since 1983, Georg Baselitz’s Gebeugter Trinker is a radical painting which showcases the artist’s special facility with paint and powerful use of colour. At once abstract and figurative, it resists simple definition. It is laden with the psychological tension of Art Brut and is at the same time a paean to the artist’s German Expressionist forebears, Die Brücke and the American school of Abstract Expressionism. One of the largest examples from his iconic series of Drinkers and Orange Eaters, Gebeugter Trinker is truly one of Baselitz’s great masterpieces.” Gebeugter Trinker depicts a man hunched over a white table, rotated in Baselitz’s customary fashion. The figure appears to hang from the ceiling as his wide face, with pale blue eyes staring at the black bottle clutched in his hands. Part of a number of striking works realized in the early 1980s, which were deemed either Drinkers or Orange Eaters depending on the commonplace activity being featured. Gebeugter Trinker falls into the former camp but is more an interrogation of Baselitz’s adept paint handling and eye for jarring composition than a treatise on routine actions. Shown the following year, and translated as ‘bent drinker’, Gebeugter Trinker continues to evolve within this notion of the everyday with a figure that takes up nearly one third of the canvas as it fuses with the white table. At the same time, the legs of both the man and support dissolve into pure brushwork at the top of the frame, allowing for a transition between identifiable themes and pure painting. Many of Baselitz’s works follow a serial progression, and the Drinkers are no different. Using a generalized subject, the artist is able to work in the figurative mode without becoming too specific, and thus subtracting from his inquiry into painting itself. By using these motifs, Baselitz occupies a transitional space that is within the confines of figurative painting while also reaching beyond just representative work. Alongside his contemporaries like Sigmar Polke and Gerhard Richter, Baselitz continuously reasserted himself as a painter evolving out of the long lineage of German Expressionists. Choosing to eschew pure abstraction (and later conceptual notions), he instead worked exhaustively to examine figural idioms within the realm of painting. ONE: a Global Sale of the 20th Century: This July, Christie’s will launch a revolutionary relay-style auction concept. Entitled ONE: A Global Sale of the 20th Century, this sale will present masterpiece-level works of 20th Century Art together in a curated live-online hybrid sale, blurring category boundaries and bringing clients together in an unprecedented way. Launching in Hong Kong, the sale will then transition to auctioneers in Paris and London, concluding in New York. Each city will host a pre-sale public exhibition staged in line with the appropriate regional health advice at the time, complemented by a ground-breaking virtual exhibition and digital marketing campaign to connect with global audiences and support the auction event. Bidders will be able to participate both online, via Christie’s LIVE online bidding channel, and where regional, government advice allows, clients and phone bidders will be welcomed in each saleroom location. Public viewing: All ONE sale highlights will be available for online viewing from anywhere in the world. For London sale highlights, Christie’s will begin welcoming clients into its King Street galleries on an appointment-only basis from 15 June, in adherence with current local public health guidelines and with all necessary measures to protect our visitors and our staff in place. PRESS CONTACT: Sara Macdonald | +44 207 752 3136 | [email protected] Rebecca Riegelhaupt | 212-636-2680 | [email protected] About Christie’s Christie’s, the world's leading art business, had auction sales in 2019 that totalled £4.5 billion / $5.8 billion. Christie’s is a name and place that speaks of extraordinary art, unparalleled service and international expertise. Christie’s offers around 350 auctions annually in over 80 categories, including all areas of fine and decorative arts, jewellery, photographs, collectibles, wine, and more. Prices range from $200 to over $100 million. Christie's also has a long and successful history conducting private sales for its clients in all categories, with emphasis on Post-War & Contemporary, Impressionist & Modern, Old Masters and Jewellery. Alongside regular sales online, Christie’s has a global presence in 46 countries, with 10 salerooms around the world including in London, New York, Paris, Geneva, Milan, Amsterdam, Dubai, Zürich, Hong Kong, and Shanghai. *Please note when quoting estimates above that other fees will apply in addition to the hammer price - see Section D of the Conditions of Sale at the back of the sale catalogue. *Estimates do not include buyer’s premium. Sales totals are hammer price plus buyer’s premium and are reported net of applicable fees. # # # Images available on request FOLLOW CHRISTIE’S ON: .
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