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LOT DETAILS
This session is closed for bidding.
Current bid: $1,200 CAD
Bidding History
Paddle # Date Amount

24436 29-Oct-2020 05:04:17 PM $1,200 AutoBid

818472 29-Oct-2020 05:04:17 PM $1,100 AutoBid

24436 29-Oct-2020 05:04:17 PM $1,000 AutoBid

818472 29-Oct-2020 05:04:17 PM $900 AutoBid

24436 29-Oct-2020 05:04:17 PM $800 AutoBid

818472 29-Oct-2020 05:04:17 PM $700 AutoBid

24436 29-Oct-2020 05:04:17 PM $600 AutoBid

818472 14-Oct-2020 03:44:10 PM $500 AutoBid

The bidding history list updated on: Thursday, March 28, 2024 11:32:11

LOT 405

1931
Canadian

Sans titre
serigraph on paper
signed, editioned 16/100 and dated 1967 and on verso inscribed "C.P.-Merola-S-01-15"
20 x 26 in, 50.8 x 66 cm

Estimate: $1,000 - $2,000 CAD

Sold for: $1,500

Preview at: Heffel Montreal

PROVENANCE
Guido Molinari Foundation


Consignor proceeds from the sale of this Lot will benefit the Guido Molinari Foundation.

Please note: this work is unframed.

Guido Molinari was a talented painter, draftsman, and poet. He also had an interest in silkscreen printing and utilized the medium sporadically for more than 35 years. During this time, he completed close to 100 different images, which sum up his entire artistic career.

Early on in his career, beginning in 1965, he discovered what this discipline could add to his pictorial and graphic works, particularly his works in black and white. His minimalist 1956 canvases, which at the time constituted a miracle of lucidity and radicalism in the history of modern painting, as well as his energetic Calligraphies, which were shown at Galerie Artek, experienced a second life in Molinari’s silkscreen studio in 1967.

That same year, in order to produce work for the master printer Ronald Perrault, Molinari conceived the idea of an album of prints in collaboration several of his most illustrious contemporaries. This project never saw the light of day, but several woodblocks which remain, produced alongside Paterson Ewen, Jacques Hurtubise, Roy Kiyooka, Jean McEwen, and Mario Merola, make us wish it had…

Guido Molinari était d’abord un peintre, un dessinateur et un poète, mais il s’est aussi intéressé à la sérigraphie qu’il a pratiquée d’une manière sporadique pendant plus de trente-cinq ans, réalisant une bonne centaine d’images différentes qui résument subtilement l’ensemble de sa démarche.

Très tôt, à partir de 1965, il a pressenti tout ce que cette discipline intimiste pouvait apporter à son travail pictural et graphique, notamment à ses œuvres en noir et blanc, qu’il s’agisse de ses toiles minimalistes de 1956, qui constituaient à l’époque une sorte de miracle de lucidité et de radicalisme dans l’histoire de la peinture moderne, ou de ses énergiques Calligraphies qui furent présentées deux ans plus tard à la Galerie Artek. Les unes et les autres connurent une deuxième vie, en 1967, dans l’atelier de sérigraphie de Molinari.

La même année, pour faire travailler le maître-imprimeur Ronald Perrault, Molinari eut l’idée de produire un album collectif d’estampes avec des images de quelques-uns de ses plus illustres contemporains. Ce généreux projet ne vit pas le jour, mais il nous reste quelques planches de Paterson Ewen, Jacques Hurtubise, Roy Kiyooka, Jean McEwen et Mario Merola, qui nous font regretter la chose…

Written by Gilles Daigneault, Director of the Fondation Guido Molinari


All prices are in Canadian Dollars


Although great care has been taken to ensure the accuracy of the information posted, errors and omissions may occur. All bids are subject to our Terms and Conditions of Business. Bidders must ensure they have satisfied themselves with the condition of the Lot prior to bidding. Condition reports are available upon request.