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23 of 131 lots
23
Jack Butler Yeats RHA (1871-1957)
Estimate:
€300,000 - €500,000
Sold
€380,000
Live Auction
Important Irish Art
Size
24 by 36in. (61 by 91.4cm)
Description
Title: DISCOVERY, 1952
Note: The distinguished London-based art critic, John Berger, who visited Jack B. Yeats in Dublin in September 1956, wrote to him about this painting a few weeks later. ‘In your canvas called Discovery, the explorer has to enter the cave, walk past the last lights that circle and fly as though they were moth and candle in one, and go even further, trailing a scarf of shadow – but then suddenly in the explorer’s close-up face it is the spectator who makes the discovery. Perhaps all art’s rather like that. But many must be richer for the discoveries that are made through your being the explorer – I among them’. [1]In this large, late work, a male figure dressed in theatrical costume with a naked torso, blue jacket and cummerbund rushes through a cave-like structure. The sea and sky are visible through its narrow entrance. The figure holds his hands in a strange gesture as if trying to find his way through the darkness. Above his head, a floating bird-like form of white, blue and red suggest, as Berger wrote, ‘the last lights that circle and fly as though they were moth and candle and one’. The use of this form is comparable to Yeats’s 1950 painting, The Truth, The Whole Truth which deals with a similar theme of revelation. [2]The intense expression of the man’s face, sculpted out of thick white and green pigment, registers a sense of deepcuriosity as if he were searching for something in the depths of this new environment. The complex shadows castby him on the walls of the cave to the left have an almost anthropomorphic quality. One wonders if Yeats wasthinking of Plato’s Allegory of the Cave when he painted this work. Could this be the returning prisoner who canno longer see after being exposed to the light outside?The discovery that Berger refers to relates to Yeats’s ability to manipulate paint to suggest specific forms but alsoto allow them to remain evidently works of art. The bare walls of the cave are composed of raw canvas while thefigure is created out of thick paint with flashes of light and shadow indicated by strokes of pigment across thesurface of the canvas. His hands are remarkable for the complex mixture of colours and texture used in theircreation. While intrigued by the subject the viewer remains aware of the physical construction of this as a work ofart and by the ability of the artist to enable us to see or to discover this metamorphosis in such tangible form.Dr Róisín Kennedy,April 2024[1] John Berger to Jack B. Yeats, 30 September 1956, quoted in Hilary Pyle, Jack B. Yeats. A Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil Paintings, Deutsch, London, 1992, II, p.1027.[2] Ibid.
Frame dimensions: 30 by 42in. (76.2 by 106.7cm)
Condition
Excellent condition.
Medium
oil on canvas
Signature
signed lower right; titled on stretcher on reverse
Provenance
Victor Waddington Galleries, London;Private collection
Literature
Pyle, Hilary, Jack B. Yeats, A Catalogue Raisonné Of The Oil Paintings, André Deutsch, London, 1992, Vol. II, no. 1126, p.1027
Exhibited
'Oil Paintings', Victor Waddington Galleries, Dublin, October 1953, catalogue no. 16;'Peintures', Galerie Beaux-Arts, Paris, February 1954, catalogue no. 30;'Paintings (Organised by CEMA)', Museum and Art Gallery, Belfast, February to March 1956, catalogue no. 35;'Later Works', Waddington Galleries, London, 6 March to 3 April 1958, catalogue no. 6;'Paintings', Irish Section of the XXI Esposizione Biennale Internazionale d'Arte, July to October 1962, catalogue no. 19;'Paintings', Waddington Galleries, London, 28 March to 27 April 1963, catalogue no. 31 (repro);'Oil Paintings', Waddington Galleries, London, 29 September to 21 October 1967, catalogue no. 31 (repro);'Jack B. Yeats Retrospective Exhibition', Waddington Fine Arts, Montreal, 12 March to 5 April 1969, catalogue no. 21;'Paintings', Hart House Gallery, University of Toronto, Toronto, 11-27 February 1971, catalogue no. 19