NEW YORK, NY.- Phillips will launch the fall auction season in New York with its New Now sale and exhibition, which will grace the companys new headquarters at 432 Park Avenue. Featuring over 220 lots, the sale includes works by some of todays most sought-after artists, including Salman Toor, Emily Mae Smith, Kehinde Wiley, Titus Kaphar, Tschabalala Self, Alex Gardner, Jenna Gribbon, and Joel Mesler. The auction also features auction debuts by Jessie Makinson, Jessie Homer French, as well as David Mr. Star City White. The auction also includes a group of work by Milo Matthieu, Delphine Desane, Bahar Bambi, Alteronce Gumby and Robert Peterson, with proceeds of their artwork benefiting Project Backboard. Highlights will be on view from 8-12 September in 432 Park Ave, with the full exhibition opening on 20 September.
Patrizia Koenig, Head of New Now, New York, said, Our September auction perfectly encapsulates the ethos of Phillips New Now sales. Were proud to present the blue-chip contemporary names that have become the keystone of the post-war and contemporary market alongside works by a dynamic group of emerging artists, many of which have been consigned by the artists themselves to benefit Project Backboards important mission. We look forward to kicking off the fall season at 432 Park Avenue with a memorable, one-of-a-kind exhibition and look forward to welcoming those in New York through our doors.
Encompassing the breadth of art making from 20th and 21st centuries, the sale includes a group of postwar art including works on paper by Milton Avery, Hans Hofmann, Elaine de Kooning, and Ellsworth Kellyas well as a selection of minimalistic paintings by artists such as Richard Lin, Suzan Frecon, and Mary Obering. Pop art master Andy Warhol is represented in the sale with Portrait of Lee Bontecou, 1967, with additional works by Keith Haring, Jean-Michel Basquiat and George Condo capturing the energetic 1980s New York art scene.
The sale is led by KAWS THE GREAT BELOW, 2011, a monumental example of the artists unique aesthetic that bridges the worlds of art, popular culture and commerce. A quintessential example of his re-envisioned pop culture icons, THE GREAT BELOW illustrates the inflated facial details of KAWSBOB, an intervention on the animated cartoon SpongeBob, imbued with the artists distinctive style. The work is also notable for the artists use of a circular shaped canvas, or tondo, a format reaching back to the Renaissance and which artist continues to explore in his practice today. KAWS practice was recently subject to a large solo show at the Brooklyn Museum.
Following on the heels of Phillips world-record for Salman Toor in their June Hong Kong Evening Sale, the New Now Sale features Girl with Beggar, 2013, a significant early work by the Pakistani-American artist, who has enraptured the art world as one of the most exciting figurative painters to emerge in recent years. Toor is celebrated for his tender depictions of serene and often surreal scenes of contemporary life, loving application of luscious oil paint, and ability to render intimate introspective nuances. Painted in 2013 and exhibited at the artists solo show The Happy Servant at Aicon Gallery in New York, Girl with Beggar is an enchanting example of Toors masterful fusion of art historical traditions and contemporary culture drawn from his experiences in both South Asia and New York, rendering relatable but perplexing scenes that visually articulate the synthesis and disorientation of life between cultures.
Eddie Martinezs Yours for the Taking, 2007, presents a classically composed still life brimming with the energy of street art and skater culture. Drawing inspiration from an array of sources ranging from graffiti to Picasso, the present work defines Martinezs playful yet rigorous painting practice: that the accountments of both art history and contemporary culture are his for the taking.
In Takashi Murakamis Engagement with This World, 2015, the word Hollow sits in spray painted lettering atop a turbulent sea of purple, black, and white skulls. The macabre backdrop replaces Murakamis signature smiling flowers, adding a cartoonish sense of existential angst to an otherwise playful image. A singular work in a series of Hollow paintings that straddle media and industries, Engagement with This World is emblematic of Takashi Murakamis worldwide success, a vivid demonstration of his Superflat aesthetic and historical fine art practices.
Mesmerizing the viewer with matrices of red built up over the underlying canvas, Jennifer Guidis Untitled (Field SF #2F, Red and Lilac), 2015, creates an enveloping and immersive effect. Guidis meticulously rendered geometric abstractions are celebrated for their rich textures and carefully rhythmic constructions, here inviting comparisons especially to Yayoi Kusamas Infinity Nets paintings.