Title:
Untitled (Figurative study in black) Medium: pen and ink on paper
Size: 22 23/4" x 14 1/4" (57.8 x 36.2 cm)
Framed Size: 31 ½" x 26" (80 x 66 cm)
Signed; Archipenko
Price: $10,500
Russian-born
sculptor who became an American citizen in 1928. He studied
at the art school in his native Kiev from 1902 to 1905,
when he was expelled for criticizing the academic attitudes
of his teachers. In 1906 he moved to Moscow and in 1908
to Paris, where he left the Ecole des Beaux-Arts after
two weeks' study, again showing his impatience of discipline.
Instead, he studied ancient and medieval sculpture in
the Louvre, and some of the work of his early years in
Paris (mainly female figures) is in a primitivistic manner
recalling Egyptian art. In about 1910, however, he was
introduced to Cubism by Leger (whose studio was near his
own) and he became one of the outstanding sculptors of
the movement. In works such as the bronze Walking Woman
(Denver Art Museum, 1912) he analysed the human figure
into geometrical forms and opened it up with concavities
and a central hole to create a contrast of solid and void,
thus ushering in a new sculptural idiom: George Heard
Hamilton writes that 'This is the first instance in modern
sculpture of the use of a hole to signify more than a
void, in fact the opposite of a void, because by recalling
the original volume the hole acquires a shape and structure
of its own'. In the same year, with Médrano
I (destroyed), Archipenko began making sculptures
that were assembled from pieces of commonplace materials,
parallelling the work of Picasso; Médrano II
(Guggenheim Museum, New York, 1913) is made of painted
tin, wood, glass, and painted oilcloth. (Médrano
was the name of a circus in Paris much frequented by artists;
these two figures represented performers there.)
Archipenko
quickly built up a reputation in France and elsewhere,
particularly in Germany. In 1912 he had a one-man exhibition
at the Folkwang Museum in Hagen and in 1913 one at the
Sturm Gallery in Berlin; also in 1913 his work was included
in the Armory Show in New York. His rise to international
prominence was interrupted by the First World War, during
which he lived in Cimiez, a suburb of Nice; his work of
this period included a number of sculpto-paintings, a
type of work he created in which forms project from and
develop a painted background. After the war he soon relaunched
his career, organizing an exhibition of his work that
toured widely in Europe in 1919-21 (Athens, Brussels,
Geneva, London, Munich, among several other cities). He
also exhibited at the Venice Biennale in 1920, on which
occasion his work was condemned by a Venetian cardinal.
His first one-man show in the USA was given by the Société
Anonyme in New York in 1921. At this period he was undoubtedly
the best known and most influential of all Cubist sculptors.
From 1921 to
1923 Archipenko lived in Berlin, where he ran an art school,
then emigrated to the USA. He lived, worked, and taught
in various places, but chiefly in New York, where he directed
his own school of sculpture from 1939 until his death.
The work he did in America did not compare in quality
or historical importance with that of his European period,
but he continued to be highly inventive. In 1924, for
example, he invented the Archipentura (a kind of Yinetic
painting), and after the Second World War he experimented
with 'light' sculptures, making structures of plastic
lit from within. His work was influential in both Europe
and America, notably in the revival of polychromy, in
the use of new materials, and in pointing the way from
the sculpture of solid form towards one of space and light.
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