app download
ArtFox APP
Home > Auction >  Post-War & Contemporary Art >  Lot.2 Keith Haring (American, 1958-1990) Dog 1986

LOT 2 Keith Haring (American, 1958-1990) Dog 1986

Starting price
GBP200,000
Estimate  GBP  200,000 ~ 300,000

Viewed  330  Frequency

Pre-bid 0  Frequency

Log in to view

logo Collect

邦瀚斯

Post-War & Contemporary Art

邦瀚斯

Name

Size

Description

Translation provided by Youdao

Translate
Size

Description

Keith Haring (American, 1958-1990) Dog 1986 signed, dated 86 and numbered 8/10 on a label affixed to the reverse enamel and silkscreen on plywood 128 by 96 by 4 cm. 50 3/8 by 37 13/16 by 1 9/16 in. This work is number 8 from an overall edition of 35, consisting of 15 white on black, 10 black on yellow, 10 red on black, 7 artist's proofs and 3 unique colour variant trial proofs. Footnotes: Provenance Edition Schellmann, Munich - New York Private Collection, Switzerland Literature Jörg Schellmann, Edition Schellmann 1969-1989, Munich 1989, p. 137, another example illustrated in colour Jörg Schellmann, Forty Are Better Than One, Munich 2009, p. 143, another example illustrated in colour Dog, from 1986 is a quintessential and powerful work by Keith Haring. A pioneer of the Contemporary Art world, Keith Haring's work would go on to redefine art as we know it. Working alongside artworld giants such as Andy Warhol and Jean-Michel Basquiat, Haring sought to break down the barriers between high and low culture, creating a whole new vocabulary of symbols, one that would become synonymous with the visual culture of the latter half of the twentieth century. Executed in 1986, Dog is boldly demonstrative of the artist's unique vocabulary and more specifically his most recognisable motif, the barking dog. Addressing highly controversial and taboo subjects, Haring didn't shy away from uncomfortable truths surrounding social injustice, AIDS, the drug crisis and racism, which he depicted using his unique iconography. Embedded in the fast and decadent culture of 1980s New York, Haring's work mimicked the city's own convergence of high and low culture, bringing together the creative principles of graffiti, semiotics and the art historical canon. By elevating primitive stick figures and cartoon characters to the same level as high art, Haring sought to democratise art, championing the individual and standing up for the oppressed. Based on a keen awareness of how pictures can serve a similar function to words, Haring was impressed early on by the hieroglyphic writings of the ancient Egyptians. In the present work, the plywood has been cut to the shape of a dog, reminiscent of the Egyptian deity, Anubis. Half-human, half-jackal, Anubis, god of the underworld, would lead your soul to the afterlife. Describing his work, Haring stated 'I was thinking about these images as symbols, as a vocabulary of things. In one a dog's being worshiped by these people. In another one the dog is being zapped by a flying saucer. Suddenly it made sense to draw on the street, because I had something to say. I made this person crawling on all fours, which evolved into the 'baby.' And there was an animal being, which now has evolved into the dog. They really were representational of human and animal. In different combinations they were the difference between human power and the power of animal instinct' (the artist in an interview with David Sheff, 'Keith Haring: Just Say Know', www.rollingstone.com, 10 August 1989). The barking dog is one of Haring's trademark picture-words, with Anubis standing in for its most macabre iteration: death. Visually assertive, the bright yellow paint used in conjunction with the shine of the black silkscreen ink in the present work acts as a warning sign, while the X-branded men, television sets and transgressive images of men and dogs emphasise the animal instinct in each of us. The dizzying frenzy of the work's interior filled with dozens of Haring's picture-words, create a fluid sentence moving through the crawling baby in the lower left foot – the emblem of a positive future – through to anthropomorphic dogs dancing on top of men – playing into Egyptian conceptions of life and death as well as Christian notions of the 'dance of the dead'. Scattered throughout are human targets branded by the letter X, including one involved in explicit liaisons with a dog in the foot of the right leg and another at the very top, the winged man or angel – symbol of death but also of the battle of good against evil – rides a dog, the X sealing their fates. These symbols would have deeply resonated with those living through the AIDS epidemic sweeping through New York City. As a gay man, Haring's life and work were entrenched in this community, becoming a huge advocate for AIDS activism. In 1989 following his own fateful diagnosis he would go on to found the Keith Haring Foundation which would provide funding for AIDS organisations and children's programmes. Keith haring died in New York City on 16 February 1990 at the age of 31. During his short ten-year career, Haring managed to produce some of the most iconic and universally recognisable images of the late twentieth century, producing work that would go onto influence a generation of artists. Through the work of the Keith Haring foundation, Haring's work has been recognised across major galleries and institutions worldwide and can be found in the collections of the Whitney Museum of Art, Washington, LACMA, Art institute of Chicago, the Ludwig Museum, Cologne and the Stedlijk Museum, Amsterdam including a recent major retrospective at the Tate Liverpool, currently on view at the BOZAR in Brussels. This lot is subject to the following lot symbols: * * VAT on imported items at a preferential rate of 5% on Hammer Price and the prevailing rate on Buyer's Premium. For further information on this lot please visit Bonhams.com

Preview:

Address:

101 New Bond Street London W1S 1SR United Kingdom

Start time:

  • Commission  GBP
  • 0 ~ Unlimitation27.5%

Online payment is available,

You will be qualified after paid the deposit!

Online payment is available for this session.

Bidding for buyers is available,

please call us for further information. Our hot line is400-010-3636 !

This session is a live auction,

available for online bidding and reserved bidding

×
This session requires a deposit. Please leave your contact. Our staff will contact you. Or you can call400-010-3636 (Mainland China)+86 010-5994 2750 (Overseas) Contact Art Fox Live Customer Service
Contact:
Other Lots in this session 34unit
Marcia Hafif (American, 1929-2018) #196 1968

LOT 1

Maria Helena Vieira da Silva (1908-1992) La fenêtre de Colette 1972

LOT 10

Pierre Soulages (French, born 1919) Peinture 65 x 92 cm, 9 février 1960 1960

LOT 11

Achille Perilli (Italian, born 1927) Il giro della favola 1966

LOT 12

Piero Dorazio (Italian, 1927-2005) Untitled

LOT 13

Carla Accardi (Italian, 1924-2014) Negativo (ideogramma) 1954

LOT 14

Mimmo Rotella (Italian, 1918-2006) Collage 1959

LOT 15

Lucio Fontana (Italian, 1899-1968) Concetto Spaziale 1964

LOT 16

Lucio Fontana (Italian, 1899-1968) Crocifisso 1948-1950

LOT 17

Otto Piene (German, 1928-2014) Untitled 1974

LOT 18

Arnulf Rainer (Austrian, born 1929) Verschränkungen 1972

LOT 19

Shara Hughes (B. 1981) Rock Garden 2009

LOT 20

David Hockney R.A. (British, born 1937) Steering Wheel, October 1982 1982

LOT 21

Julian Opie (British, born 1958) Julian and Suzanne 2006

LOT 22

Tom Wesselmann (American, 1931-2004) Embossed nude with still life 1967

LOT 23

Mel Ramos (1935-2018) Toblerone Tess: The lost painting of 1965 #57 2006

LOT 24

Art Fox Live
Buyers
Auctioneers
Follow Us
Feedback

在线客服

咨询热线

400-010-3636

微信公众号

APP下载

顶部

Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the current bidding is ended.
Hint
宝物的份数已经被购完,下次下手请及时。
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not be able to bid and pay the deposit when the session is ended.
Hint
You will not able to bid now when the bid is started or ended.