拍品 34
拍品 34
Untitled (S.K G.C.)

Angel Otero (b. 1981)

成交價 GBP 7,500
估價
GBP 5,000 - GBP 7,000
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Untitled (S.K G.C.)

Angel Otero (b. 1981)

成交價 GBP 7,500
成交價 GBP 7,500
  • 詳情
  • 拍品專文
詳情
Angel Otero (b. 1981)
Untitled (S.K G.C)
signed, titled and dated 'Angel Otero 2012 S.K G.C' (on the reverse)
oil, metallic paint and oil skins collage on canvas
20⅜ x 16½ x 2⅜in. (51.5 x 42 x 6cm.)
Executed in 2012

Provenance:
Kavi Gupta Gallery, Chicago.
Acquired from the above by the present owner.

Please note this lot is the property of a private collector.

特別通告
Please note this lot is the property of a consumer. See H1 of the Conditions of Sale.
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拍品專文



Angel Otero is an abstract innovator, imbuing his works with visceral physicality. His process begins with painting thick layers of oil upon Plexiglas; while they are half-dry, he peels off the resulting ‘oil skins’ and applies them to canvas prepared with adhesive, forming a sculptural painterly surface that he then further adorns with gestural abstract brushstrokes. More influenced by the New York School of Abstract Expressionism than by his contemporaries, the artist arrived to an MFA scholarship in Chicago from Puerto Rico aged twenty-four with only a rudimentary knowledge of recent art history. Today he continues to work in oil – even though his labour-intensive process would be easier with acrylic – for its rich historical associations as well as its powerful materiality. ‘Painters, I think, recognize the physicality of oil paint specifically, how demanding it is, and how closely it can resemble our own bodies. Each of my paintings has a layer of skin … It’s a way of dealing with the history of painting, and at the same time it’s a very materialistic and physical process’ (A. Otero in A. M. Goldstein, ‘Artist Angel Otero on "Justifying" the Medium of Painting,’ Artspace, 17 October 2013). The resulting works occupy an intriguing ground between painting and sculpture, collage and décollage, creating the odd sensation that we are seeing painting done back-to-front; their brooding colours and textures form a tactile zone where past and present combine to potent effect.