Čís. položky 794


Gino De Dominicis *


Gino De Dominicis * - Současné umění I

(Ancona 1947–1998 Rome)
Opera Ubiqua (Delfina D. D. - Auronia D. D.) 1996, graphite on silkscreen, on masonite, 86 x 39 cm, framed

Photo certificate:
Fondazione Archivio Gino De Dominicis, Rome, under the archive no. GDD/Operaubiqua/grafitesumason ite/SP-RC/1997–02 (with incomplete technique and wrongly dated 1997)

Provenance:
Studio of the artist
Sergio Pandolfini Collection
European Private Collection

Exhibited:
Sant’Elpidio a Mare (FM), Bianco, Italiano e..., Real Arte, 16–23 April 2016, exh. cat. with ill.

Literature:
I. Tomassoni, Gino De Dominicis, Catalogo ragionato, Skira (ed.), Milan, 2011, p. 484–485, no. 548 with ill.

The work presented here is an important sketch executed, with great refinement and skill, for the Opera Ubiqua series. In his preparatory work for the creation of the multiple Opera Ubiqua, De Dominicis completed several trial versions in different sizes. Before arriving at a definitive configuration and size, Opera Ubiqua went through various alternative formats. Early on, the silhouette of the goddess Urvasi became an important icon in his work, her profile drawn in black against a background of gold leaf. Subsequently, he created female faces of different formats and with some variations, whose expressions seemed to be inspired by Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa (...).
In his definitive image, Auronia, De Dominicis distills a harmonious resolution and perhaps also a sublimation of his series of alienated creatures – the ones that he had brought forth at the very moment when Western art, by obscuring and rejecting the image for almost a century, had experienced modernity as a sort of separation and collapse.

Photo certificate:
Fondazione Archivio Gino De Dominicis, Rome, under the archive no. GDD/Operaubiqua/grafitesumason ite/SP-RC/1997–02 (with incomplete technique and wrongly dated 1997)

Provenance:
Studio of the artist
Sergio Pandolfini Collection
European Private Collection

Exhibited:
Sant’Elpidio a Mare (FM), Bianco, Italiano e..., Real Arte, 16–23 April 2016, exh. cat. with ill.

Literature:
I. Tommasoni, Gino De Dominicis, Catalogo ragionato, Skira (ed.), Milan, 2011, p. 484–485, no. 548 with ill.

The work presented here is an important sketch executed, with great refinement and skill, for the Opera Ubiqua series. In his preparatory work for the creation of the multiple Opera Ubiqua, De Dominicis completed several trial versions in different sizes. Before arriving at a definitive configuration and size, Opera Ubiqua went through various alternative formats. Early on, the silhouette of the goddess Urvasi became an important icon in his work, her profile drawn in black against a background of gold leaf. Subsequently, he created female faces of different formats and with some variations, whose expressions seemed to be inspired by Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa (...).
In his definitive image, Auronia, De Dominicis distills a harmonious resolution and perhaps also a sublimation of his series of alienated creatures – the ones that he had brought forth at the very moment when Western art, by obscuring and rejecting the image for almost a century, had experienced modernity as a sort of separation and collapse.

22.11.2016 - 18:00

Dosažená cena: **
EUR 47.500,-
Odhadní cena:
EUR 30.000,- do EUR 40.000,-

Gino De Dominicis *


(Ancona 1947–1998 Rome)
Opera Ubiqua (Delfina D. D. - Auronia D. D.) 1996, graphite on silkscreen, on masonite, 86 x 39 cm, framed

Photo certificate:
Fondazione Archivio Gino De Dominicis, Rome, under the archive no. GDD/Operaubiqua/grafitesumason ite/SP-RC/1997–02 (with incomplete technique and wrongly dated 1997)

Provenance:
Studio of the artist
Sergio Pandolfini Collection
European Private Collection

Exhibited:
Sant’Elpidio a Mare (FM), Bianco, Italiano e..., Real Arte, 16–23 April 2016, exh. cat. with ill.

Literature:
I. Tomassoni, Gino De Dominicis, Catalogo ragionato, Skira (ed.), Milan, 2011, p. 484–485, no. 548 with ill.

The work presented here is an important sketch executed, with great refinement and skill, for the Opera Ubiqua series. In his preparatory work for the creation of the multiple Opera Ubiqua, De Dominicis completed several trial versions in different sizes. Before arriving at a definitive configuration and size, Opera Ubiqua went through various alternative formats. Early on, the silhouette of the goddess Urvasi became an important icon in his work, her profile drawn in black against a background of gold leaf. Subsequently, he created female faces of different formats and with some variations, whose expressions seemed to be inspired by Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa (...).
In his definitive image, Auronia, De Dominicis distills a harmonious resolution and perhaps also a sublimation of his series of alienated creatures – the ones that he had brought forth at the very moment when Western art, by obscuring and rejecting the image for almost a century, had experienced modernity as a sort of separation and collapse.

Photo certificate:
Fondazione Archivio Gino De Dominicis, Rome, under the archive no. GDD/Operaubiqua/grafitesumason ite/SP-RC/1997–02 (with incomplete technique and wrongly dated 1997)

Provenance:
Studio of the artist
Sergio Pandolfini Collection
European Private Collection

Exhibited:
Sant’Elpidio a Mare (FM), Bianco, Italiano e..., Real Arte, 16–23 April 2016, exh. cat. with ill.

Literature:
I. Tommasoni, Gino De Dominicis, Catalogo ragionato, Skira (ed.), Milan, 2011, p. 484–485, no. 548 with ill.

The work presented here is an important sketch executed, with great refinement and skill, for the Opera Ubiqua series. In his preparatory work for the creation of the multiple Opera Ubiqua, De Dominicis completed several trial versions in different sizes. Before arriving at a definitive configuration and size, Opera Ubiqua went through various alternative formats. Early on, the silhouette of the goddess Urvasi became an important icon in his work, her profile drawn in black against a background of gold leaf. Subsequently, he created female faces of different formats and with some variations, whose expressions seemed to be inspired by Leonardo da Vinci’s Mona Lisa (...).
In his definitive image, Auronia, De Dominicis distills a harmonious resolution and perhaps also a sublimation of his series of alienated creatures – the ones that he had brought forth at the very moment when Western art, by obscuring and rejecting the image for almost a century, had experienced modernity as a sort of separation and collapse.


Horká linka kupujících Po-Pá: 10.00 - 17.00
kundendienst@dorotheum.at

+43 1 515 60 200
Aukce: Současné umění I
Typ aukce: Salónní aukce
Datum: 22.11.2016 - 18:00
Místo konání aukce: Wien | Palais Dorotheum
Prohlídka: 12.11. - 22.11.2016


** Kupní cena vč. poplatku kupujícího a DPH

Není již možné podávat příkazy ke koupi přes internet. Aukce se právě připravuje resp. byla již uskutečněna.

Proč se registrovat na portálu myDOROTHEUM?

Bezplatná registrace v myDOROTHEUM vám umožní využívat následující funkce:

Katalog Upozornění, jakmile je nový aukční katalog online.
Připomenutí aukce Připomínka dva dny před zahájením aukce.
Online přihazování Přihazujte na své oblíbené kousky a dražte nová mistrovská díla!
Služba vyhledávání Hledáte konkrétního umělce nebo značku? Uložte si vyhledávání a budete automaticky informováni, jakmile se objeví v aukci!