拍品專文
With the advent of World War I, Alexander Archipenko moved to Nice in the south of France. Lacking the studio and materials required for traditional sculpture techniques, Archipenko began to develop "sculpto-painting" which he described as "a panel uniting colors and forms...interdependencies of relief, concave or perforated forms, colors and textures...made of papier-mâché, glass, wood of metal". As Katherine Michaelsen has written:
The significance of the sculpto-painting in Archipenko's work has thus far not been fully recognized...the sculpto-paintings may well constitute Archipenko's most original body of work. It is precisely the unexpected passage from one medium to the next--from projecting volume to pictorial surface--that is the unique quality of the sculpto-painting. Although in subject matter and style they rely on cubist paintings, the compositions are conceived with a greater spontaneity and imagination; they are entirely free of aesthetic constraints. The most striking feature of the sculpto-painting is dazzling, dissonant color... By combining painting and sculpture, Archipenko created a new medium of representation. (K.J. Michaelsen, Alexander Archipenko, A Centennial Tribute, exh. cat., National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C., 1986-1987, pp. 39-40)
The significance of the sculpto-painting in Archipenko's work has thus far not been fully recognized...the sculpto-paintings may well constitute Archipenko's most original body of work. It is precisely the unexpected passage from one medium to the next--from projecting volume to pictorial surface--that is the unique quality of the sculpto-painting. Although in subject matter and style they rely on cubist paintings, the compositions are conceived with a greater spontaneity and imagination; they are entirely free of aesthetic constraints. The most striking feature of the sculpto-painting is dazzling, dissonant color... By combining painting and sculpture, Archipenko created a new medium of representation. (K.J. Michaelsen, Alexander Archipenko, A Centennial Tribute, exh. cat., National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C., 1986-1987, pp. 39-40)