Irish Art

Irish Art

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 22. Image of James Joyce.

Louis le Brocquy, R.H.A.

Image of James Joyce

Lot Closed

May 2, 12:21 PM GMT

Estimate

50,000 - 70,000 EUR

Lot Details

Description

Louis le Brocquy, R.H.A.

1916-2012

Image of James Joyce



signed Le BROCQUY and dated 79 (on the reverse); also signed, dated 79 and inscribed ETUDE VERS UNE IMAGE DE JAMES JOYCE (on the stretcher)

oil on canvas

unframed 70 by 70cm.; 27½ by 27½in.

framed: 91.5 by 91.5cm.; 36 by 36in.

Executed in 1979. 



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Louis le Brocquy, R.H.A.

1916-2012

Image of James Joyce


signé Le BROCQUY et daté 79 (au revers) ; également signé, daté 79 et inscrit ETUDE VERS UNE IMAGE DE JAMES JOYCE (sur le châssis)

huile sur toile

san cadre: 70 by 70cm.; 27½ by 27½in.

avec cadre: 91.5 by 91.5cm.; 36 by 36in.

Exécuté en 1979. 

The Artist's Estate


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La succession de l'artiste

One of the most avant-garde and celebrated Irish artists of the 20th century, the present portrait of the acclaimed writer James Joyce belongs to the series of works that Louis le Brocquy made of literary figures and fellow artists for his Portrait Head series, which began in the 1980s. Often selecting subjects for their influential contribution to cultural history, Le Brocquy became renowned for these works which explored deeper into the states of being and the psychologies of these well-known sitters.

 

Within this series, Le Brocquy was preoccupied with visualising and uncovering the stories behind their success. This series followed Le Brocquy’s earlier ‘ancestral heads’ works, which were non-specific and based on his fascination with the importance of head imagery in earlier Celtic culture throughout the ages. Le Brocquy followed the belief throughout his career that heads had a hugely spiritual aspect, able to help reveal ‘the mysterious state of conscious being’.

 

Concentrated areas of colour make up some of the features of Joyce’s visage, while the majority is rendered through monochrome details. Joyce’s face is only half-realised, as if he is in the process of emerging or materialising right before the viewer. These details are submerged in a field of white space, which was characteristic of Le Brocquy’s work from this period. This in turn accentuates the isolation and eeriness of this floating ghost-like head. The inclusion of only selected aspects of his sitter’s faces means that Le Brocquy’s portraits often have a poignant, psychological aspect to them, as well as an element of the unknown. In this work, Joyce comes to possess an almost untouchable, ethereal quality which is both fleeting and eternal, vulnerable and pervasive, and with little that is easily determinable by the artist or the viewer.