Sale: 600 / Evening Sale, Dec. 05. 2025 in Munich
Lot 125001462
Lot 125001462
125001462
Hans (Jean) Arp
Tête sur griffes, 1949.
Bronze with brown-green patina
Estimate:
€ 80,000 - 120,000
$ 92,800 - 139,200
Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
Hans (Jean) Arp
1886 - 1966
Tête sur griffes. 1949.
Bronze with brown-green patina.
Copy 0 of 5. 47 x 23 x 19 cm (18.5 x 9 x 7.4 in).
Presumably cast in 1961. [AW].
• Lifetime cast.
• Hans Arp distills the form to its essence, lending it an almost futuristic expression.
• His unmistakable sculptures earned Hans Arp lasting recognition.
• Another copy is in the collection of the Albertina in Vienna.
PROVENANCE: From the artist's estate.
Estate of Marguerite Arp-Hagenbach, Clamart (1969).
Fondation Arp, Clamart (1977).
Art dealer Wolfgang Werner, Bremen/Berlin.
Private collection, Germany (acquired from the above in 1992).
EXHIBITION: Jean Arp, Curt Valentin Gallery, New York, March 2-27, 1954, cat. no. 7 (b/w illu. on p. 11).
Jean Arp. A Retrospective, Museum of Modern Art, New York, Oct. 8-Nov. 30, 1958, cat. no. 89 (different copy).
Sculpture in our Time. Collected by Joseph H. Hirshhorn, Institute of Arts, Detroit, May 5-Aug. 23, 1959, cat. no. 43 (different copy).
Artists and Patrons. A Tribute to Curt Valentin, Marlborough-Gerson Gallery, New York, November to December 1963, cat. no. 78 (different copy).
Arp, Galleria Narciso, Turin, April 17-May 12, 1971, cat. no. 23 (b/w illu.).
Hans Arp 1886-1965. Dada. Art Concret, Graphisches Kabinett Kunsthandel Wolfgang Werner, Bremen 1991, Kat.-Nr. 13 (color illu.).
Hans Arp - Kurt Schwitters, Kunsthandel Wolfgang Werner, Berlin, 1992, Kat.-Nr. 13 (color illu.).
LITERATURE: Carola Giedion-Welcker, Marguerite Hagenbach (Doc.), Hans Arp, Stuttgart 1957, CR no. 90 (with b/w illu. on p. 58, different copy).
Arie Hartog (publisher), Kai Fischer (ed.), Hans Arp. Skulpturen – Eine Bestandsaufnahme, Ostfildern 2012, CR no. 90, p. 101 (with b/w illustration, different copy).
-
Michel Seuphor, Die Plastik unseres Jahrhunderts, Cologne 1959, p. 105 (with illustration, probably a different copy).
Rudolf Koella, Felix Billeter, Verborgene Meisterwerke. R. & H. Batliner Art Foundation Vaduz, Vaduz 2005, p. 294 (with color illustration on p. 295, different copy).
1886 - 1966
Tête sur griffes. 1949.
Bronze with brown-green patina.
Copy 0 of 5. 47 x 23 x 19 cm (18.5 x 9 x 7.4 in).
Presumably cast in 1961. [AW].
• Lifetime cast.
• Hans Arp distills the form to its essence, lending it an almost futuristic expression.
• His unmistakable sculptures earned Hans Arp lasting recognition.
• Another copy is in the collection of the Albertina in Vienna.
PROVENANCE: From the artist's estate.
Estate of Marguerite Arp-Hagenbach, Clamart (1969).
Fondation Arp, Clamart (1977).
Art dealer Wolfgang Werner, Bremen/Berlin.
Private collection, Germany (acquired from the above in 1992).
EXHIBITION: Jean Arp, Curt Valentin Gallery, New York, March 2-27, 1954, cat. no. 7 (b/w illu. on p. 11).
Jean Arp. A Retrospective, Museum of Modern Art, New York, Oct. 8-Nov. 30, 1958, cat. no. 89 (different copy).
Sculpture in our Time. Collected by Joseph H. Hirshhorn, Institute of Arts, Detroit, May 5-Aug. 23, 1959, cat. no. 43 (different copy).
Artists and Patrons. A Tribute to Curt Valentin, Marlborough-Gerson Gallery, New York, November to December 1963, cat. no. 78 (different copy).
Arp, Galleria Narciso, Turin, April 17-May 12, 1971, cat. no. 23 (b/w illu.).
Hans Arp 1886-1965. Dada. Art Concret, Graphisches Kabinett Kunsthandel Wolfgang Werner, Bremen 1991, Kat.-Nr. 13 (color illu.).
Hans Arp - Kurt Schwitters, Kunsthandel Wolfgang Werner, Berlin, 1992, Kat.-Nr. 13 (color illu.).
LITERATURE: Carola Giedion-Welcker, Marguerite Hagenbach (Doc.), Hans Arp, Stuttgart 1957, CR no. 90 (with b/w illu. on p. 58, different copy).
Arie Hartog (publisher), Kai Fischer (ed.), Hans Arp. Skulpturen – Eine Bestandsaufnahme, Ostfildern 2012, CR no. 90, p. 101 (with b/w illustration, different copy).
-
Michel Seuphor, Die Plastik unseres Jahrhunderts, Cologne 1959, p. 105 (with illustration, probably a different copy).
Rudolf Koella, Felix Billeter, Verborgene Meisterwerke. R. & H. Batliner Art Foundation Vaduz, Vaduz 2005, p. 294 (with color illustration on p. 295, different copy).
The informal pictorial language of Hans Arp continues to exert great fascination on its observers to this day, making him one of the central figures of the international avant-garde of the first half of the 20th century. As a response to the First World War, the Dada movement, of which he was a founding member, was established in Zurich in 1916. Through their artistic expression, they aimed to parody bourgeois ideals and conventions, aptly choosing the seemingly banal name “Dada” for their artist group. After Hans Arp met his future wife, Sophie Taeuber, in 1915 and introduced her to the Dadaist circle, they moved to Cologne in 1919, where he befriended Max Ernst and joined the Surrealist movement in Paris in 1923. The Arps took French citizenship and became key members of the artistic avant-garde until the turning point when the National Socialists came to power. After Hans Arp's works were branded as “degenerate,” the couple fled via unoccupied France to Switzerland in 1942, where Sophie Taeuber-Arp tragically died just one year later. A loss that would take Hans Arp years to recover from.
From an artistic point of view, however, this period of upheaval can be regarded as extremely fertile. Hans Arp's versatile artistic genius became apparent at an early age: he painted and sketched, created woodcuts, lithographs, reliefs, and sculptures, as well as collages and assemblages. However, Hans Arp was to achieve his greatest fame as a sculptor. Early on, he succeeded in giving his works completely new forms of expression and content. He tirelessly produced small-format sculptures and reliefs in plaster, bronze, stone, and wood, which often served as models for later large-scale sculptures. Their bold curves, smooth surfaces, and surprising alternation between emptiness and solid mass usually seem to be taken from nature. At times, the shapes appear biomorphic, at times anthropomorphic, as the poetic title “Tête sur griffes” (English: “Claw Head”) of the present work suggests. The name evokes the image of an animal with a massive head and sharp claws. But Arp's sculpture is anything but frightening: it combines gracefulness and grandeur in a clear, reduced form. Arp distills the figure to its essence and gives it an almost futuristic expression—like a being from another reality. [AW]
From an artistic point of view, however, this period of upheaval can be regarded as extremely fertile. Hans Arp's versatile artistic genius became apparent at an early age: he painted and sketched, created woodcuts, lithographs, reliefs, and sculptures, as well as collages and assemblages. However, Hans Arp was to achieve his greatest fame as a sculptor. Early on, he succeeded in giving his works completely new forms of expression and content. He tirelessly produced small-format sculptures and reliefs in plaster, bronze, stone, and wood, which often served as models for later large-scale sculptures. Their bold curves, smooth surfaces, and surprising alternation between emptiness and solid mass usually seem to be taken from nature. At times, the shapes appear biomorphic, at times anthropomorphic, as the poetic title “Tête sur griffes” (English: “Claw Head”) of the present work suggests. The name evokes the image of an animal with a massive head and sharp claws. But Arp's sculpture is anything but frightening: it combines gracefulness and grandeur in a clear, reduced form. Arp distills the figure to its essence and gives it an almost futuristic expression—like a being from another reality. [AW]
125001462
Hans (Jean) Arp
Tête sur griffes, 1949.
Bronze with brown-green patina
Estimate:
€ 80,000 - 120,000
$ 92,800 - 139,200
Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
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