Carol Bove - Contemporary Art Evening Sale London Sunday, June 28, 2015 | Phillips

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  • Provenance

    Kimmerich, Düsseldorf

  • Exhibited

    New York, Kimmerich, Carol Bove, 5 March–1 May 2010

  • Literature

    C. Chaffee, The Middle Pillar: Carol Bove, New York: Karma, 2013 (illustrated)

  • Catalogue Essay

    A luxuriant sea of purest peacock, Carol Bove’s Untitled almost overwhelms with its mesmeric power. Bove is known for her unusual assemblages of found objects: she has created sculpture in media as wide-ranging as aluminium, petrified wood, concrete, and the work of other artists. Her feather arrangements breathe forth a lavish materiality that echoes the sumptuous decorative arts of the baroque. In regular formation the feathers belie any fragility of organic origin, ranks of eyes cascading through a design recalling damask wallpaper: the surface is hypnotic, shimmering and uncannily seductive.

    The peacock has a rich history of cultural significance. In Persia and Babylonia it was seen as a guardian of royals, and early Christian symbolism associates the bird with immortality. Its magnificent plumage is used in courtship, and has a correspondingly sensuous visual appeal: the angle at which the ocelli or eye-spots are displayed is key in the male peacock’s sexual success. Bove distils and unbodies this iridescent splendour to a panel of pure abstraction, but maintains a sense of dark drama that projects out towards the viewer.

    Untitled is a succinct expression of Bove’s practice at large; it is the enthralling result of a masterly command of the auras of objects. In her hands anything from looped white steel tubing to chain-link curtain can become an elliptical icon of ritual and allure, occupying installation spaces with subtly resonant sculptural conversation. The inexorable attraction of the massed feathers occupies scintillating ground between painting and sculpture, refining delicate physicality in an opulent quintessence of beauty.

9

Untitled

2008
peacock feathers on linen
243.8 x 121.9 x 12.7 cm (95 7/8 x 47 7/8 x 5 in.)

Estimate
£120,000 - 180,000 

Sold for £140,500

Contact Specialist
Peter Sumner
Head of Contemporary Art, London
psumner@phillips.com
+44 207 318 4063

Contemporary Art Evening Sale

London 29 June 2015 7pm