
The Sleep of Reason: A Private Collection of Surrealist Art Online
Lot Closed
May 20, 04:20 PM GMT
Estimate
5,000 - 7,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
HANS BELLMER (1902 - 1975)
SANS TITRE
Signed Bellmer (lower left)
Pencil on paper
8¼ by 5¼ in. (20.9 by 13.3 cm)
Framed: 16⅞ by 13⅞ in. (42.8 by 35.2 cm)
Executed circa 1955.
Galerie Saint Germain, Paris
Gallery of Surrealism, New York
Acquired from the above on April 10, 2005
Andre Pieyre de Mandiargues, Le Trésor cruel de Hans Bellmer, Paris, 1980, illustrated p. 197
The German artist Hans Bellmer began his career as a draughtsman at his own advertising agency. He began producing his famed Surrealist dolls as a rebellion against the authority of his father and the rising fascist state. These biomorphic, purposefully disturbing forms with multiple extremities sometimes appeared headless or missing limbs, and were often presented nude in vaguely sexual poses. When the Nazis declared his work degenerate Bellmer fled to France, where he found artistic camaraderie with the Surrealist circle. Following the War, he abandoned doll making, focusing on photographs, etchings and paintings of figures in sexually explicit positions.