Arman (1928-2005)
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 2… Read more
Arman (1928-2005)

Accumulation

Details
Arman (1928-2005)
Accumulation
signed, titled and dated 'Accumulation Arman 66' (lower right)
acrylic paint and paint tubes laid down in Plexiglas
23½ x 15¾in. (59.6 x 39.8cm.)
Executed in 1966
Provenance
With Galerie Bonnier, Lausanne, circa 1967/68.
Special notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 20% on the buyer's premium.

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Arne Everwijn
Arne Everwijn

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Lot Essay

The son of an art dealer, Arman's youth was filled with objects. These objects subsequently became crucial to his work, yet he deliberately disturbs and destroys their integrity as objects in order to realise his own particular aesthetic objectives. A founding member of the Nouveaux Réalistes, Arman explained that 'the great shock for me was the discovery of Dada and Surrealism and seeing objects made integral to the work of art' (Arman quoted in J. Putman, Les Moments d'Arman, Paris 1973).

For Arman, the act is an important element of his artistic practice. He accumulates, cuts, burns, destroys, and transforms the object and, in so doing, gives it a new shape, a new life. As van de Marck has observed, 'Arman's working methods are more akin to those of the surgeon or demolition expert than to those of the painter or sculptor. He searches and selects, appraises and decides, isolates or combines, arranges and rearranges, cuts, burns, pours and freezes to ultimately present instead of representing, a new world of his own making' (J. van de Marck, 'Arman: An Archaeologist of the Present', Arman: Selected Activities, New York 1973, p. 20).

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