DAN FLAVIN (1933-1996)
DAN FLAVIN (1933-1996)
DAN FLAVIN (1933-1996)
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DAN FLAVIN (1933-1996)
4 More
Property from an Important New York Collection
DAN FLAVIN (1933-1996)

untitled (for Charlotte and Jim Brooks) 7

Details
DAN FLAVIN (1933-1996)
untitled (for Charlotte and Jim Brooks) 7
pink and blue fluorescent light
5 ½ x 48 x 3 ¼ in. (14 x 122 x 8.3 cm.)
Conceived in 1964. This work is number one from an edition of five, of which three were fabricated, and is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity signed by the artist.
Provenance
Pace Gallery, New York, acquired directly from the artist
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1992
Literature
F. Leen, "... Notes for an Electric Light Art. (Dan Flavin)," Forum International 3, November-December 1992, p. 2 (another example illustrated and illustrated on the cover).
A. Zevi, "Icone fluorescenti/Dan Flavin's Flourescent Icons," L'Architettura, vol. 39, nos. 7-8, July-August 1993, p. 569, no. 7 (another example illustrated).
M. Govan and T. Bell, eds., Dan Flavin: The Complete Lights 1961-1996, New York, 2004, pp. 244, no. 87 (diagram illustrated).
Exhibited
New York, Pace Gallery, Dan Flavin: Colored Fluorescent Light, 1964 and 1992, February-March 1992.
Houston, Texas Gallery, untitled (for Charlotte and Jim Brooks) 1964 & untitled (to Ken Price) 1992, March-May 1993 (another example exhibited).
New York, Greenberg Van Doren Gallery, Unlikely Friends: James Brooks & Dan Flavin, January-February 2012 (another example exhibited).

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Lot Essay

"[…] Flavin’s astonishingly familiar-yet-unfamiliar objects—mass-produced cylinders of artificial light—at first seemed to have everything to do with the tabula rasa of Minimalism and little to do with anything else. At home with the rock-bottom geometries portentously unveiled by other artists of his generation—Andre, Stella, Robert Morris, Judd—and, when lit, ethereally defiant of gravity and corporeal presence, his early work appeared to inhabit a pristine world of disembodied intellect, reexamining elementary principles of mensuration or, as in a primary picture, 1964, rediscovering, via a hardware store’s fluorescent spectrum, the three primary colors once sanctified by Piet Mondrian (and reinvented in the 1960s by Newman and Roy Lichtenstein). Moreover, the tonic cerebration that allied Flavin to Minimalism was further underlined by a growing awareness of his connection to Marcel Duchamp […]"(R. Rosenblum, “Passages: Dan Flavin,” Artforum, March 1997).

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