Pace Tokyo celebrates Sonia Delaunay's visionary color and design
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Pace Tokyo celebrates Sonia Delaunay's visionary color and design
Sonia Delaunay, Foulard Gouache F 5231, 1928. Gouache on paper, 22 cm × 19.5 cm (8-11/16" × 7-11/16"), sheet 46.6 cm × 45 cm × 2.5 cm (18-3/8" × 17-11/16" × 1"), frame.



TOKYO.- Pace is presenting an exhibition of work by the late French modernist Sonia Delaunay at its Tokyo gallery from September 5 to October 18. A trailblazing artist of the 20th century, Delaunay nurtured a lifelong interest in the emotional, psychological, and phenomenological dimensions of color, and, though she trained as a painter, she is also widely known for her textiles and fashion designs.

Taking its title from a quotation by Delaunay, Pace’s presentation in Tokyo will feature a selection of her works on paper—created between the 1920s and 1940s—which served as studies for her commercial fabric designs. Organized in collaboration with Gió Marconi Gallery, this exhibition showcases the artist’s visionary approach to color, pattern, and abstraction in relation to Japan’s unique aesthetic history.

Born in the Ukrainian village of Gradizhsk in 1885, Delaunay’s parents sent her to live with her uncle in St. Petersburg when she was seven years old. She studied in Germany as a teenager and subsequently moved to Paris, where she presented her first solo exhibition in 1908, married fellow artist Robert Delaunay in 1910, and would live and work for most of her life. The pair developed what they termed “simultanéisme,” or “simultanism,” —soon after called Orphism—a non-representation mode of making art that centered on chromatic relationships and contrasts. Embracing this philosophy in her work until her death in 1979, Delaunay charted new courses for the avant-garde with her lyrical, madcap paintings and textile designs.

“We had rediscovered the moving principle of any work of art: the light, the movement of color,” she once said.

Pace’s presentation of some 40 works on paper by Delaunay offers a window into the artist’s experimentations with form and material on an intimate scale. Depicting flowers, grids, starbursts, and otherworldly abstractions, these works— many of which are displayed in custom frames built by the gallerist Giorgio Marconi, who championed many artists, including Delaunay, during his lifetime—reflect the exploratory spirit that animated her practice for more than six decades.

Delaunay’s work was on view in the Museum of Modern Art in New York’s Woven Histories exhibition. She was also included in the Guggenheim Museum in New York’s recent exhibition Harmony and Dissonance: Orphism in Paris, 1910–1930, and last year she was the subject of Sonia Delaunay: Living Art at the city’s Bard Graduate Center Gallery.

Pace’s exhibition of Delaunay’s work runs concurrently with a presentation by Leo Villareal at its Tokyo gallery, drawing connections between both artists’ use of abstraction to explore perception, pattern, rhythm, and illusionistic optical effects.

"Fueled by a lifelong exploration of color’s emotional, psychological and phenomenological force, [Delaunay] translated the pulse of modern life into a kinesthetic, near-musical experience of abstraction." -- Elisa Carollo, Observer










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