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LOT 11

Francis Picabia (1879-1953), Sans titre (Pot de fleurs)

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Francis Picabia (1879-1953)
Sans titre (Pot de fleurs)
signed 'FRANCIS PICABIA' (lower left)
Ripolin, Ripolin paint can lids, stretcher keys, quill toothpicks, paint brushes and string on canvas
25 5/8 x 21 1/4 in. (65.2 x 54 cm.)
Executed circa 1924-1925

Special Notice
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.
These lots have been imported from outside the EU for sale using a Temporary Import regime. Import VAT is payable (at 5%) on the Hammer price. VAT is also payable (at 20%) on the buyer’s Premium on a VAT inclusive basis. When a buyer of such a lot has registered an EU address but wishes to export the lot or complete the import into another EU country, he must advise Christie's immediately after the auction.

Provenance
(Probably) Colette Jéramec Tchernia, Paris.
André Tchernia, Aix-en-Provence, circa mid 1960s.
(Probably) Simone Collinet, Paris.
Galleria Notizie (Luciano Pistoi), Turin, circa 1972.
Galleria Ippolito Simonis, Turin, by circa 1974.
Acquired by the present owner in 1980.

Pre-Lot Text
ABSTRACTION BEYOND BORDERS: WORKS FROM A DISTINGUISHED PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION
From Paris to Munich, Berlin, Milan and Hanover, in the opening decades of the Twentieth Century, a number of artists created art that radically differed from those of their predecessors. Working across Europe, these pioneering provocateurs, radicals and trailblazers – Georges Braque, Francis Picabia, František Kupka, to name just a few – shunned the last vestiges of illusionism to instead create unprecedented works with no visible, recognisable or definable subject matter. Liberating colour, line and form from their centuries-old descriptive role, they overturned pictorial tradition, embarking on an abstract adventure that would come to define art of the Twentieth Century. Crossing geographical boundaries, encompassing a variety of media, and often blurring traditional distinctions of painting and sculpture, abstraction spread with an extraordinary speed, transforming artistic practice forever.
From the initial steps towards a new artistic language, to the paradigmatic embodiment of this concept, this diverse group of works embodies this varied, experimental and groundbreaking path of abstraction, demonstrating the variety of ways that artists across the globe embraced this radical practice. Braque’s cubist composition, Cartes et cornet à dés presents the origin of this move towards a new, non-representational artistic language. Along with Picasso – the pair, ‘like mountain-climbers roped together’, as Braque recalled of this frenzied period of seismic innovation – the artist undermined conventional notions of perspective, opening the door to a whole new way of depicting the world.
As rebellious as the cubists’ rejection of the centuries-old rules of representation, Picabia’s playful collage Sans titre (Pot de fleurs) uses the very materials of art making to parody the mimetic traditions of art, creating a semi-abstract play of colour and line. Far removed from any trace of the recognisable world, Kurt Schwitters’ rare Merz relief, Das Richard-Freitag-Bild dates from the height of his involvement with the International Constructivist movement. It was executed during a period when he was codifying Merz – the one-man art movement that he created in 1919 – into a utopian Constructivist language of form, taking the deconstruction of Dada and combining it with the aims of Constructivism. Following the same aesthetic, Georges Vantongerloo’s perfectly composed De Stijl composition embodies the tenets of geometric abstraction. In addition, Kupka, one of the leading pioneers of non-representational abstraction, is represented in this collection with a rare composition entitled Series C, III, Elevation, a work that marries his elegant abstract idiom with the deeper, spiritual dimension that was often the source of his abstractions.
By contrast, Magritte, an artist whose unique form of Surrealism serves as the very antithesis to the development of non-representational abstraction, is represented in this group with an important early painting, Les signes du soir. A pictorial trompe l’oeil riddle, with this painting Magritte confuses, undermines and questions the entire nature of representational painting, paving the way for the conceptual art that dominated artistic production of the post-war era.
From the purely formal – Schwitters and Vantongerloo – to the spiritual, mystic or surreal – Kupka, Jawlensky, Magritte and Picasso, this collection, assembled with the eye of an aesthete, encapsulates the multi-faceted nature and pioneering spirit of modernist abstraction throughout the Twentieth Century. Their curiosity, daring eclecticism and pioneering spirit of exploration nearly 100 years ago paved the way for artists and collectors today.

Literature
W. A. Camfield, Francis Picabia: His Art, Life and Times, New Jersey, 1979, no. 268, n.p. (illustrated; dated 'circa 1924-1926').
M. L. Borràs, Picabia, London, 1985, no. 349, p. 516 (illustrated fig. 594, p. 316; titled 'Painting' and dated 'circa 1923-1925').
A. Pierre, Francis Picabia: La peinture sans aura, Paris, 2002, pp. 208-209 (illustrated fig. 83, p. 209; titled 'La Peinture' and dated 'circa 1925').
W. A. Camfield, B. & P. Calté, C. Clements, A. Pierre & A. Verdier, Francis Picabia, Catalogue raisonné, vol. II, 1915-1927, New Haven & London, 2016, no. 925, p. 410 (illustrated; detail illustrated p. 411).

Exhibited
Turin, Galleria Civica d'Arte Moderna, Francis Picabia: mezzo secolo di avanguardia, November 1974 - February 1975, no. 45, n.p. (illustrated; dated 'circa 1923 - 1925').
Paris, Galeries Nationales du Grand Palais, Francis Picabia: Portrait de l'auteur par lui-me^me, January - March 1976, no. 144, pp. 41 & 188 (illustrated p. 144).
Zurich, Kunsthaus, Francis Picabia, February - March 1984, no. 55, p. 175 (illustrated p. 71; dated 'circa 1924-1927').
Zurich, Kunsthaus, Francis Picabia: Our Heads are Round so our Thoughts can Change Direction, June - September 2016, p. 353 (illustrated pl. 147, p. 179); this exhibition later travelled to New York, Museum of Modern Art, November 2016 - March 2017.

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Francis Picabia (1879-1953)
Sans titre (Pot de fleurs)
signed 'FRANCIS PICABIA' (lower left)
Ripolin, Ripolin paint can lids, stretcher keys, quill toothpicks, paint brushes and string on canvas
25 5/8 x 21 1/4 in. (65.2 x 54 cm.)
Executed circa 1924-1925

Special Notice
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.
These lots have been imported from outside the EU for sale using a Temporary Import regime. Import VAT is payable (at 5%) on the Hammer price. VAT is also payable (at 20%) on the buyer’s Premium on a VAT inclusive basis. When a buyer of such a lot has registered an EU address but wishes to export the lot or complete the import into another EU country, he must advise Christie's immediately after the auction.

Provenance
(Probably) Colette Jéramec Tchernia, Paris.
André Tchernia, Aix-en-Provence, circa mid 1960s.
(Probably) Simone Collinet, Paris.
Galleria Notizie (Luciano Pistoi), Turin, circa 1972.
Galleria Ippolito Simonis, Turin, by circa 1974.
Acquired by the present owner in 1980.

Pre-Lot Text
ABSTRACTION BEYOND BORDERS: WORKS FROM A DISTINGUISHED PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION
From Paris to Munich, Berlin, Milan and Hanover, in the opening decades of the Twentieth Century, a number of artists created art that radically differed from those of their predecessors. Working across Europe, these pioneering provocateurs, radicals and trailblazers – Georges Braque, Francis Picabia, František Kupka, to name just a few – shunned the last vestiges of illusionism to instead create unprecedented works with no visible, recognisable or definable subject matter. Liberating colour, line and form from their centuries-old descriptive role, they overturned pictorial tradition, embarking on an abstract adventure that would come to define art of the Twentieth Century. Crossing geographical boundaries, encompassing a variety of media, and often blurring traditional distinctions of painting and sculpture, abstraction spread with an extraordinary speed, transforming artistic practice forever.
From the initial steps towards a new artistic language, to the paradigmatic embodiment of this concept, this diverse group of works embodies this varied, experimental and groundbreaking path of abstraction, demonstrating the variety of ways that artists across the globe embraced this radical practice. Braque’s cubist composition, Cartes et cornet à dés presents the origin of this move towards a new, non-representational artistic language. Along with Picasso – the pair, ‘like mountain-climbers roped together’, as Braque recalled of this frenzied period of seismic innovation – the artist undermined conventional notions of perspective, opening the door to a whole new way of depicting the world.
As rebellious as the cubists’ rejection of the centuries-old rules of representation, Picabia’s playful collage Sans titre (Pot de fleurs) uses the very materials of art making to parody the mimetic traditions of art, creating a semi-abstract play of colour and line. Far removed from any trace of the recognisable world, Kurt Schwitters’ rare Merz relief, Das Richard-Freitag-Bild dates from the height of his involvement with the International Constructivist movement. It was executed during a period when he was codifying Merz – the one-man art movement that he created in 1919 – into a utopian Constructivist language of form, taking the deconstruction of Dada and combining it with the aims of Constructivism. Following the same aesthetic, Georges Vantongerloo’s perfectly composed De Stijl composition embodies the tenets of geometric abstraction. In addition, Kupka, one of the leading pioneers of non-representational abstraction, is represented in this collection with a rare composition entitled Series C, III, Elevation, a work that marries his elegant abstract idiom with the deeper, spiritual dimension that was often the source of his abstractions.
By contrast, Magritte, an artist whose unique form of Surrealism serves as the very antithesis to the development of non-representational abstraction, is represented in this group with an important early painting, Les signes du soir. A pictorial trompe l’oeil riddle, with this painting Magritte confuses, undermines and questions the entire nature of representational painting, paving the way for the conceptual art that dominated artistic production of the post-war era.
From the purely formal – Schwitters and Vantongerloo – to the spiritual, mystic or surreal – Kupka, Jawlensky, Magritte and Picasso, this collection, assembled with the eye of an aesthete, encapsulates the multi-faceted nature and pioneering spirit of modernist abstraction throughout the Twentieth Century. Their curiosity, daring eclecticism and pioneering spirit of exploration nearly 100 years ago paved the way for artists and collectors today.

Literature
W. A. Camfield, Francis Picabia: His Art, Life and Times, New Jersey, 1979, no. 268, n.p. (illustrated; dated 'circa 1924-1926').
M. L. Borràs, Picabia, London, 1985, no. 349, p. 516 (illustrated fig. 594, p. 316; titled 'Painting' and dated 'circa 1923-1925').
A. Pierre, Francis Picabia: La peinture sans aura, Paris, 2002, pp. 208-209 (illustrated fig. 83, p. 209; titled 'La Peinture' and dated 'circa 1925').
W. A. Camfield, B. & P. Calté, C. Clements, A. Pierre & A. Verdier, Francis Picabia, Catalogue raisonné, vol. II, 1915-1927, New Haven & London, 2016, no. 925, p. 410 (illustrated; detail illustrated p. 411).

Exhibited
Turin, Galleria Civica d'Arte Moderna, Francis Picabia: mezzo secolo di avanguardia, November 1974 - February 1975, no. 45, n.p. (illustrated; dated 'circa 1923 - 1925').
Paris, Galeries Nationales du Grand Palais, Francis Picabia: Portrait de l'auteur par lui-me^me, January - March 1976, no. 144, pp. 41 & 188 (illustrated p. 144).
Zurich, Kunsthaus, Francis Picabia, February - March 1984, no. 55, p. 175 (illustrated p. 71; dated 'circa 1924-1927').
Zurich, Kunsthaus, Francis Picabia: Our Heads are Round so our Thoughts can Change Direction, June - September 2016, p. 353 (illustrated pl. 147, p. 179); this exhibition later travelled to New York, Museum of Modern Art, November 2016 - March 2017.

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Sale price
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Estimate
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Time, Location
27 Feb 2018
UK, London
Auction House
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