126000139
Piero Dorazio
Prima che il lago geli, 1958.
Oil on canvas
Estimate:
€ 120,000 - 150,000

 
$ 140,400 - 175,500

Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
126000139
Piero Dorazio
Prima che il lago geli, 1958.
Oil on canvas
Estimate:
€ 120,000 - 150,000

 
$ 140,400 - 175,500

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

Piero Dorazio
1927 - 2005

Prima che il lago geli. 1958.
Oil on canvas.
Signed and dated in the lower right. Signed, dated, numbered, and identified “2” on the reverse of the canvas. 99.5 x 79.8 cm (39.1 x 31.4 in).


• In the late 1950s, Dorazio moved from initially very sensual superimpositions of a multitude of intersecting lines to his later, more austere, complex, and vibrant color structures.
• Color, light, and rhythmic structures are the central elements of his painting.
• First exhibited as early as 1961 (Kunsthalle Düsseldorf).
• Part of a private collection in Southern Germany for about 30 years
.

This work is registered with the Archivio Piero Dorazio, Milan. We are grateful for their kind assistance in cataloging this lot.

PROVENANCE: Galerie Springer, Berlin (with the gallery label bearing the German title “Bevor die Seen gefroren sind”) on the reverse.
Private collection, Baden-Württemberg (acquired from the above in 2000).

EXHIBITION: Piero Dorazio, Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen, Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, Oct. 18–Nov. 26, 1961, cat. no. 38 (with full-page color illustration, under the alternative title “Ton désordre”).
Der Maler Antonio Calderara. Freunde, Einflüsse, Anregungen, Kunsthalle Kiel, September 19–October 24, 1982, p. 64 (on the stretcher with the exhibition label).
Energie - Hoffnung - Freude. Piero Dorazio, Kunstmuseum Altes Rathaus, Bayreuth, July 13–October 12, 2003.

LITERATURE: Marisa Volpi Orlandini, Jacques Lassaigne, and Giorgio Crisafi, Dorazio, Milan 1977, CR no. 244 (with the French title “Avant que les lacs soyent glaces”, incorrectly dated “1957,” and the black-and-white illustration mixed up with CR no. 281).

Piero Dorazio devoted himself to pure abstraction as early as the 1950s. Following a formative stay in Paris and several influential trips, the artist accepted an invitation to a seminar at Harvard University in 1953. He traveled to the United States for the first time, spending several months there, engaging with the leading figures of American post-war art—particularly the Abstract Expressionists—and drawing inspiration from the vibrant art scene. He did not return to Rome until the summer of 1954. His stay in the U.S. proved pivotal to his subsequent artistic development. The wide range of experiences he has gathered, along with his knowledge and skills, is now interwoven into his unique artistic creations and plays a central role in shaping his abstract visual language.

In addition to color, the line has played a significant role in Piero Dorazio’s painting since the 1940s, becoming the central means of expression in his rhythmically organized works by the late 1950s. His work underwent a decisive transformation: Dorazio moved away from the vivid expressiveness of his earlier paintings and developed an abstraction based on gestural networks of lines and rhythmic structure.

From 1957 onward, his compositions reveal a new structural and formal clarity: line and gesture take center stage in his artistic practice. A number of these lyrical, painterly works were on display in a solo exhibition at the legendary “La Tartaruga” gallery in Rome, among other venues, during that year. In 1958, the year this work was created, the fluid, dynamic application of paint became more dense, forming a loose, somewhat finer, grid-like structure that already foreshadows the stylistic shift Dorazio’s work would undergo in the years to come. “Prima che il lago geli" [Before the Lakes Froze] was created during this pivotal period in Piero Dorazio’s oeuvre and marks the transition from his early, highly sensual, gestural painting to his later austere, complex, and vibrating color structures. The basic idea behind the development that was soon to begin can already be observed in this work: Dorazio weaves a vibrant fabric of color and lines from a multitude of intersecting lines, through which he explores the representational potential of light and shadow and their spatial qualities. “Even back then, I noticed that the interplay of light and shadow does not arise from opposing masses of light and dark, but rather from a bewildering system of moving points, threads that rhythmically approach and recede from one another from second to second, rather than, as our imagination would have it, obeying clear boundaries.” (Piero Dorazio, quoted from: Piero Dorazio, L'ombra ladra – The Thieving Shadow, 1990, in: Kritisches Lexikon der Gegenwartskunst, Munich 1995, p. 15)

To this day, Piero Dorazio is regarded as one of the leading figures and pioneers of abstract art in Italy. His paintings are part of major museum collections, including the Tate Gallery in London, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. [CH]






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