VICTOR BRAUNER (1903-1966)
VICTOR BRAUNER (1903-1966)
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PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT NEW YORK COLLECTION
VICTOR BRAUNER (1903-1966)

Sphère de la naissance II

Details
VICTOR BRAUNER (1903-1966)
Sphère de la naissance II
signed and dated 'VICTOR BRAUNER 20.7.1943' (lower right)
oil on canvas
25 5⁄8 x 21 ¼ in. (65 x 54 cm.)
Painted on 20 July 1943
Provenance
Galleria Gissi, Turin.
Galerie de l’Ile de France, Paris, by 1972.
Anonymous sale, Breraarte, Milan, 12 March 1987, lot 283.
Galerie Patrice Trigano, Paris.
Acquired from the above by the family of the present owner in June 1989.
Exhibited
Munich, Haus der Kunst, Der Surrealismus 1922-1942, March - May 1972; this exhibition later travelled to Paris, Musée des Arts Décoratifs, June - Septembre 1972, no. 40 (illustrated).
Turin, Gissi Galleria d'Arte, Protagonisti del XX secolo, December 1973 - January 1974, no. 5 (illustrated).
Monaco, Le Point, Victor Brauner, June - July 1979 (illustrated).
Nassau, County Museum of Art, Surrealism, January - April 1995, p. 6 (illustrated).
Further Details
Samy Kinge has confirmed the authenticity of this work.

Brought to you by

Ottavia Marchitelli
Ottavia Marchitelli Senior Specialist, Head of The Art of The Surreal Sale

Lot Essay

With its enigmatic central figure, Sphère de la naissance II embodies Victor Brauner’s highly individual, polymorphous vision, which made his paintings some of the most striking explorations of archaic tradition and the occult within the Surrealist group. Brauner had left his homeland of Romania in 1930, and was drawn to the vibrant art world of in Paris. Here, he became deeply involved with the Dada and Surrealist review UNU, before formally joining the Surrealist movement in 1932. Raised by a father infatuated with spiritualism and mysticism, Brauner himself developed a deep interest in the occult, Kabbalistic art, mythology and magic, themes that he explored endlessly in his work. Forced to remain in France during the Second World War after his attempts to emigrate to America were foiled, his artistic vision continued to flourish despite a lack of traditional painterly materials. In Sphère de la naissance II, two hybrid, biomorphic creatures appear to swirl into being in a semi-translucent sphere, their bodies overlapping and blending together in a strange configuration that is accentuated by the soft, blurry effect of the artist’s brushwork. Using delicate lines of soft white pigment, Brauner sketches facial features into the surface of the sphere – a pair of eyes, a nose and mouth – transforming this Sphère de la naissance into a head, filled with such mysterious, unusual dreams.

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