NEW YORK, NY.- Peter Doigs 1990 masterpiece Swamped (estimate on request) will be a leading highlight of
Christies New York Marquee Week this November, featured in the auction houses 21st Century Art Evening Sale. The painting stands as the most important of Doigs canoe series, considered the pinnacle of his oeuvre, and has established a world auction record every time it has appeared at auction. It was last sold at Christies New York in 2015 for $ 25.9 million, a new record at the time. It is now poised to break the artists current record of $28.8 million. The painting will be exhibited in Christies London galleries 9th 16th October and in Christie's Los Angeles galleries 20th 23rd October before returning to New York ahead of the sale.
Peter Doigs canoe paintings have come to be icons of contemporary art, and Swamped is among the earliest and most exquisitely rendered of the works in the series. Swamped has stood as an important touchstone for Doig in scores of major exhibitions, including the 1998 touring retrospective at Kunsthalle Kiel, Kunsthalle Nürnberg and Whitechapel Art Gallery, London; Kunstaus Glarus, Switzerland, 1999; Le Musée dArt moderne de la Ville de Paris, Tate Britain, London and Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt 2008-2009; and Fondation Beyeler, Basel 2015.
Ana Maria Celis, Senior Vice President, Senior Specialist, 21st Century Art, remarks, Standing as a leading work within his highly celebrated canoe series, Swamped brilliantly showcases Peter Doigs singular and unique ability to manipulate the materiality of oil paint to render masterful compositions that exist on the border of figuration and abstraction. We are thrilled to present this masterpiece this November in Christie's New York Evening Sale, poised to yet again set an auction world record for Doig, a truly seminal artist of the 21st century.
Painted in 1990, Swamped marks a pivotal moment in Doigs career, just prior to his graduation from the Chelsea College of Art and Design and his winning of the prestigious Whitechapel Artist Prize. This award would culminate in a solo exhibition for Doig at the Whitechapel Art Gallery in 1991. The prospect of this major institutional show, which took place at a formative stage in the artists career, spurred an intense bout of creativity in the period leading up to the exhibition. As a result, during this time Doig produced a small number of large format canvases, including Swamped, which he now recognizes as the thematic matrix of his oeuvre.
With Swamped, Doig demonstrates a unique ability that has led him to become one of the greatest painters of his generation through creating a harmonious friction between figurative atmosphere, dense abstraction, and painterly meaning. The work portrays a solitary boat floating silently in a swamp. The curve of the white canoes hull meets the open water and casts a perfect reflection, like an image in a looking glass, with a color-filled, wild and mysterious inverted universe stretched out beneath.
The origin of the series of canoe paintings was born out of a dream sequence in the 1980 film, Friday 13th; specifically from the famous scene where protagonist Jason Voorhees shoots out of the water to grab his only survivor from behind, dragging her into the icy water, and she wakes up in a hospital to find it was just a dream. Doig has continued to return to this film still and its image of the solitary canoe over time The subsequent paintings are now widely recognized to be his most accomplished, including Swamped (1990), Canoe Lake (1997-1998), Ghost Canoe (1991), White Canoe (1991), 100 Years Ago (2000) and 100 years ago Carrera (2001) (Centre Georges Pompidou, Musée national dart moderne, Paris). Doig stands apart from any other painter in history in is his ability to embody landscape in the brushstroke. Each painting from this group showcases his masterful technical skill and ability to manipulate paint in a way that is a simultaneously figurative and abstract celebration of the physical properties of nature.