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Louis le Brocquy HRHA (b.1916) - IMAGE OF JAMES JOYCE, 1990

Currency:EUR Category:Art / General - Paintings Start Price:NA Estimated At:18,000.00 - 22,000.00 EUR
Louis le Brocquy HRHA (b.1916) - IMAGE OF JAMES JOYCE, 1990

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Auction Date:2011 Oct 10 @ 18:00 (UTC+1)
Location:Royal Dublin Society, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
Artist: Louis le Brocquy HRHA (b.1916)
Title: IMAGE OF JAMES JOYCE, 1990
Medium: watercolour
Signature: signed and dated lower right
Dimensions: 64 by 48cm., 25.2 5 by 18.7 5in.
Provenance: Provenance:Kerlin Gallery, Dublin; Where purchased by thwe present owner
Exhibited: Exhibited:'Louis le Brocquy, Paintings 1940-1990', Kerlin Gallery [Hibernian Fine Art], Dublin, January 1991
Literature:
Note: This watercolour of Joyce pertains to the artist's series of Portrait Heads executed c.1975-2005. According to Anne Crookshank in her text for the Kerlin exhibition catalogue, "...Le Brocquy has always been a great practitioner of watercolour and the thin washes of his early oils have much in common with this method... The irregular dabs of brilliant colour, purple, blue, and green, as non-descriptive as the tesserae of a Byzantine mosaic, build up the form of his heads with a tense, nervous immediacy which oil with its overlapping layers and opaque thickness never can achieve. The traces of paper left between each stroke, which enhance the brilliancy of the colours, and the gleam of whiteness, which glows through the paint, all help to create the truly magical effect of images coagulating in front of your eyes, coming alive, mediating, speaking, and ultimately returning to their own imaginative genius. He sometimes uses tissue paper to paint from, using it in such a way that the creases make caesuras in the strokes of paint. The results are deliberately induced accidents which help to keep the images at a distance from us, to give them reality only as paintings, not as descriptive portraits...The magic of the quietness of le Brocquy's oils is surpassed only by the excitement of his watercolours. They may be as still as the oils. But the sheer joy of their running, smudged, fragmented, clear colours brings vital reality to the spirit of his rediscovered genius. In this aspect of his work, le Brocquy has added a new dimension to his art. He has become a great colourist."