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409
1298284

Donald Baechler

(United States, Born 1956)
Estimate
200 000 - 250 000 SEK
17 900 - 22 300 EUR
18 100 - 22 700 USD
Hammer price
250 000 SEK
Purchasing info
Image rights

The artworks in this database are protected by copyright and may not be reproduced without the permission of the rights holders. The artworks are reproduced in this database with a license from Bildupphovsrätt.

For condition report contact specialist
Louise Wrede
Stockholm
Louise Wrede
Specialist Contemporary Art, Private Sales
+46 (0)739 40 08 19
Donald Baechler
(United States, Born 1956)

"Standing Figure"

Executed in 1997. Bronze, height ca 83 cm. Granite base ca 10.5 x 61.5 x 51 cm.

Provenance

Lars Bohman Gallery, Stockholm.
Private collection, Stockholm.

More information

Donald Baechler (b. 1956, USA) uses a childlike imagery in his paintings and sculptures and is regarded as one of the most interesting artists of our time. One of his many established gallerist’s Cheim & Reid describes his work: ”His repertoire of motifs is to be found disperse across different genres, starting from drawings and ending up as sculptures where, after a process of transformation, these motifs finally take on three-dimensional volume."

In an interview accompanied to the exhibition ”Sculptures” in 2005 at the Museum of Modern Art in Salzburg, Baechler had this to say:

“About fifteen or twenty years ago I was very unhappy with the way I was drawing, and I decided, as a kind of project, to relearn how to draw from the beginning, from the very simplest gestures, to reinvent a vocabulary of lines and shapes. And I started looking at children’s art and art of the insane and the whole Dubuffet thing. So when I started doing sculptures, about ten years ago, I was looking again for a way to make forms as if I’d never made sculpture before. So I wanted to forget about armatures and about the proper way of using clay and the proper way of doing anything, and started just squeezing things with my hands, making shapes…

So there really is no narrative intention; it’s just a response to materials. And they happen to look the way they do, because that’s the way they look. I think there’s even less content in the sculpture than in the paintings. Less narrative. I think they’re kind of mute... I’m interested in discreet and very mute objects, and I’ve never really been interested in narrative or psychology or these things which many people read into my paintings and probably into the sculptures.”