Sale: 600 / Evening Sale, Dec. 05. 2025 in Munich button next Lot 125001461

 

125001461
Hans (Jean) Arp
Métamorphose (coquille - cygne - balance-toi), 1935.
Bronze
Estimate:
€ 100,000 - 150,000

 
$ 116,000 - 174,000

Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
Hans (Jean) Arp
1886 - 1966

Métamorphose (coquille - cygne - balance-toi). 1935.
Bronze.
Copy 4 of 5. 22.5 x 15 x 13.5 cm (8.8 x 5.9 x 5.3 in).

Cast by Rudier, Paris, on Feburary 4, 1960. [AW].

• Lifetime cast.
• “Métamorphose” remarkably embodies Hans Arp's organic-abstract formal language, which is inspired by nature.
• Reduced to its abstract essence, the bronze still offers a rich range of associations.
• A plaster copy is in the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.
.

Accompanied by a photo certificate issued by Hans Arp on November 12, 1960, in Basel.

PROVENANCE: Galerie d'Art Moderne, Basel (1960).
Galerie Patrick Cramer, Geneva.
Galerie Wolfgang Werner, Bremen.
Private collection, Germany (acquired from the above in 1992).

EXHIBITION: Jean Arp. Sculptures, Prints, Tapestries, Galerie Patrick Cramer, Geneva, January 27–March 18, 1978, cat. no. 1 (with b/w illustration on the title page).
Skulpturen 1925-1950. Zwischen Abstraktion und Figuration, Graphisches Kabinett Kunsthandel Wolfgang Werner, Bremen 1989, cat. no. 2 (with illustration).
Hans Arp 1886–1965. Dada. Art Concret, Graphisches Kabinett Kunsthandel Wolfgang Werner, Bremen 1991, cat. no. 6 (with color illustration).
Hans Arp – Kurt Schwitters, Kunsthandel Wolfgang Werner, Berlin, 1992, cat. no. 6 (with color illustration).

LITERATURE: Carola Giedion-Welcker, Marguerite Hagenbach (doc.), Hans Arp, Stuttgart 1957, CR no, p. 110.
Arie Hartog (publisher), Kai Fischer (ed.), Hans Arp. Skulpturen – Eine Bestandsaufnahme, Ostfildern 2012, CR no. 24, p. 74 (with a b/w illustration of a different copy).
- -
Herbert Read, The Art of Jean Arp, New York 1968, cat. no. 96, p. 90 (with a b/w illustration on p. 93, probably another copy).
Ketterer Kunst, Munich, 21st auction, May 23–25, 1977, lot 520 (with a b/w ill. on p. 12).
Christie's, London, March 29, 1988, lot 200.

Hans Arp's work is characterized by a remarkable degree of artistic versatility. Throughout his life, he was not only a painter and sculptor, but also a poet. He published his first poems and lyrics at an early age, initially in Alsatian, and later in German and French. Arp was always at the forefront of the avant-garde movements of his time. Before he played a decisive role in shaping European Modernism as co-founder of the Dada movement in Zurich in 1916, he was involved in the second exhibition of the “Blauer Reiter” (Blue Rider) group in Munich in 1912. In the 1920s, he was part of the Surrealist circles in Paris, where he met Amedeo Modigliani, Pablo Picasso, Kurt Schwitters, and Guillaume Apollinaire. In 1928, he collaborated with Theo van Doesburg on Sophie Taeuber-Arp's commission to transform the former military building Aubette in Strasbourg into a modern entertainment center. In the 1930s, he joined the French artist groups “Cercle et Carré” and “Abstraction Création,” which were committed to Constructivist art.
Today, Arp is considered one of the leading figures of organic abstract art, for which he found inspiration in nature's growth and transformation. The idea of metamorphosis is a recurring theme in his work. While he primarily created reliefs, collages, and drawings at the beginning of his career, from the 1930s onwards, he increasingly devoted himself to sculpture—the form of expression in which his idea of living, transforming form found its fullest expression. This is also the spirit in which our bronze sculpture “Métamorphose” should be understood. Arp combines a smooth surface with a bold, consistent reduction of form and incredible energy. The sculpture appears to be concentrated on its abstract essence, but, as the title suggests, it inspires a variety of associations—be it a shell, a swan, or a swing. With Hans Arp, the form always remains organic, and nature always plays a central role. His theme is the great harmonious unity of the living and growing, the blossoming abundance of forms and their incessant metamorphosis—aspects that this work from 1935 impressively embodies. [AW]



125001461
Hans (Jean) Arp
Métamorphose (coquille - cygne - balance-toi), 1935.
Bronze
Estimate:
€ 100,000 - 150,000

 
$ 116,000 - 174,000

Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.

 


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