James Rosenquist, 'Welcome to the Water Planet III'
James Rosenquist’s fascination with images of pop-culture, especially from Time Magazine, made him seek out another path than the Abstract Expressionists who were his peers. His hand-painted collage-like compositions differ from those of other early Pop art contemporaries as Jim Dine, Robert Indiana, Roy Lichtenstein, Claes Oldenburg and Andy Warhol. Rosenquist rarely used any mechanical means as stencils or silk-screening. He was a painter in the very traditional sense, producing very untraditional images.
The monumental painting ‘Welcome to the Water Planet III’ was commissioned by the McDonald's headquarters in Sweden in the late 80s. The work measures 5.25 meters in height and it is a magnificent work created for the modern open lobby of the head office in Stockholm. ‘Welcome to the Water Planet III’ is a striking image balancing between realism and kaleidoscopic abstraction. The canvas is divided by an invisible horizon over which bright signature pink water lilies are floating. Underneath is a magical tangle of flowers, roots, and a bird dragging pieces of skin. Up in the distant sky a stella nova passes by, possibly a threat to life below. It is partially obscured by a curious overlay of the slivered image of a fashion model’s face adding a mysterious aura to this work.
The practice of commissioned work has been a significant part of the art world for centuries. The traditional relationship between patron and artist has in recent times been replaced by the one between artist, gallery, and art dealer. James Rosenquist is unusual in that, albeit hesitant, he has had several important large-scale commissions for clients in the US and abroad.
› Signed James Rosenquist and dated 1988 on the overlap verso. Oil on canvas mounted to panel, three parts, total 525 x 204.9 cm, each 175 x 204.9 cm. (Total 206 11/16" x 80 11/16").
“… Over the years I have made paintings and I have exhibited them. They weren’t commissions, but fireworks started to happen. Governments wanted to buy them; people argued over them and where to place them. Some people wrote poems about them. It was exciting. Later on people wanted to commission me to do a mural for them…”
– James Rosenquist, 1989
In 1988, two years after the installation of “Ladies of the Opera Terrace”, Rosenquist was approached by Paul Lederhausen, the president of McDonald's in Sweden. The company wanted to commission a mural for the brick-walled atrium of the company headquarters in Stockholm. Rosenquist had met with Lederhausen and asked him what he was thinking about. The answer was ‘Good health, welfare and good food’. Rosenquist wanted to accommodate this line of thought and create something happy or in his own words ‘Disney-like’. In the above-mentioned interview with Professor Adcock he explains: “It was Winter again in Sweden, and I thought, well hell, I’ll give them something colourful, reddish, positive and filled with fantasy like the Garden of Eden.” The resulting mural 'Welcome to the Water Planet III' is just that, a brighter and happier rendering of the first version in the series, created for the Lennox Building in Atlanta in 1987. The basic elements in the composition are the same, the Monet-inspired water lilies, the starry sky, and the cut-out overlays. However, the palette is warmer and the sense of an underlying threat to life on the planet is subdued. The bright water lilies are floating upwards, almost lifting from the horizon drawn towards the spiral galaxy in the sky. The distant stars can be seen as representing attraction, the attraction of making a journey to a point of light or the attraction of working to get to a point in thought.
'Welcome to the Water Planet III' by James Rosenquist will be sold at Contemporary Art & Design.
Estimate 6 000 000 - 8 000 000 SEK
Viewing: April 19 – 23, Berzelii Park 1, Stockholm
Open: weekdays 11 am – 6 pm, weekends 11 am – 4 pm
Live auction: April 24 – 25, Arsenalsgatan 2, Stockholm