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HAROLD ANCART(n. 1980)

$395,000

 
<div>Harold Ancart’s <em>Untitled </em>(2015) reflects the artist’s poetic engagement with landscape and memory, created in the wake of his transformative 2014 cross-country road trip across the United States. During this journey, Ancart converted his car into a mobile studio, stopping spontaneously to sketch and record fleeting impressions of the natural environment. These observations informed a new body of work that magnified and abstracted ephemeral moments in the landscape, ultimately inspiring his first major institutional solo exhibition at The Menil Collection in Houston in 2016. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>In this painting, a luminous, stylized plant rises against a deep black ground, its elongated leaves rendered in radiant greens, yellows, and reds that appear to glow against the darkness. The composition balances graphic clarity with expressive spontaneity—gestural marks and splashes of color orbit the central form like fragments of light or drifting pollen. By isolating and enlarging a single botanical subject, Ancart transforms a fleeting natural encounter into a monumental image that feels both intimate and cosmic. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Plant imagery has remained a recurring motif throughout Ancart’s practice, reappearing in later exhibitions including his 2022–2023 presentation at Gagosian. Trained in Belgium and later influenced by the legacy of American abstraction after relocating to New York in 2007, Ancart’s work merges a European sensibility with the expressive freedom of postwar American painting. </div> <div>Harold Ancart’s <em>Untitled </em>(2015) reflects the artist’s poetic engagement with landscape and memory, created in the wake of his transformative 2014 cross-country road trip across the United States. During this journey, Ancart converted his car into a mobile studio, stopping spontaneously to sketch and record fleeting impressions of the natural environment. These observations informed a new body of work that magnified and abstracted ephemeral moments in the landscape, ultimately inspiring his first major institutional solo exhibition at The Menil Collection in Houston in 2016. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>In this painting, a luminous, stylized plant rises against a deep black ground, its elongated leaves rendered in radiant greens, yellows, and reds that appear to glow against the darkness. The composition balances graphic clarity with expressive spontaneity—gestural marks and splashes of color orbit the central form like fragments of light or drifting pollen. By isolating and enlarging a single botanical subject, Ancart transforms a fleeting natural encounter into a monumental image that feels both intimate and cosmic. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Plant imagery has remained a recurring motif throughout Ancart’s practice, reappearing in later exhibitions including his 2022–2023 presentation at Gagosian. Trained in Belgium and later influenced by the legacy of American abstraction after relocating to New York in 2007, Ancart’s work merges a European sensibility with the expressive freedom of postwar American painting. </div> <div>Harold Ancart’s <em>Untitled </em>(2015) reflects the artist’s poetic engagement with landscape and memory, created in the wake of his transformative 2014 cross-country road trip across the United States. During this journey, Ancart converted his car into a mobile studio, stopping spontaneously to sketch and record fleeting impressions of the natural environment. These observations informed a new body of work that magnified and abstracted ephemeral moments in the landscape, ultimately inspiring his first major institutional solo exhibition at The Menil Collection in Houston in 2016. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>In this painting, a luminous, stylized plant rises against a deep black ground, its elongated leaves rendered in radiant greens, yellows, and reds that appear to glow against the darkness. The composition balances graphic clarity with expressive spontaneity—gestural marks and splashes of color orbit the central form like fragments of light or drifting pollen. By isolating and enlarging a single botanical subject, Ancart transforms a fleeting natural encounter into a monumental image that feels both intimate and cosmic. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Plant imagery has remained a recurring motif throughout Ancart’s practice, reappearing in later exhibitions including his 2022–2023 presentation at Gagosian. Trained in Belgium and later influenced by the legacy of American abstraction after relocating to New York in 2007, Ancart’s work merges a European sensibility with the expressive freedom of postwar American painting. </div> <div>Harold Ancart’s <em>Untitled </em>(2015) reflects the artist’s poetic engagement with landscape and memory, created in the wake of his transformative 2014 cross-country road trip across the United States. During this journey, Ancart converted his car into a mobile studio, stopping spontaneously to sketch and record fleeting impressions of the natural environment. These observations informed a new body of work that magnified and abstracted ephemeral moments in the landscape, ultimately inspiring his first major institutional solo exhibition at The Menil Collection in Houston in 2016. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>In this painting, a luminous, stylized plant rises against a deep black ground, its elongated leaves rendered in radiant greens, yellows, and reds that appear to glow against the darkness. The composition balances graphic clarity with expressive spontaneity—gestural marks and splashes of color orbit the central form like fragments of light or drifting pollen. By isolating and enlarging a single botanical subject, Ancart transforms a fleeting natural encounter into a monumental image that feels both intimate and cosmic. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Plant imagery has remained a recurring motif throughout Ancart’s practice, reappearing in later exhibitions including his 2022–2023 presentation at Gagosian. Trained in Belgium and later influenced by the legacy of American abstraction after relocating to New York in 2007, Ancart’s work merges a European sensibility with the expressive freedom of postwar American painting. </div> <div>Harold Ancart’s <em>Untitled </em>(2015) reflects the artist’s poetic engagement with landscape and memory, created in the wake of his transformative 2014 cross-country road trip across the United States. During this journey, Ancart converted his car into a mobile studio, stopping spontaneously to sketch and record fleeting impressions of the natural environment. These observations informed a new body of work that magnified and abstracted ephemeral moments in the landscape, ultimately inspiring his first major institutional solo exhibition at The Menil Collection in Houston in 2016. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>In this painting, a luminous, stylized plant rises against a deep black ground, its elongated leaves rendered in radiant greens, yellows, and reds that appear to glow against the darkness. The composition balances graphic clarity with expressive spontaneity—gestural marks and splashes of color orbit the central form like fragments of light or drifting pollen. By isolating and enlarging a single botanical subject, Ancart transforms a fleeting natural encounter into a monumental image that feels both intimate and cosmic. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Plant imagery has remained a recurring motif throughout Ancart’s practice, reappearing in later exhibitions including his 2022–2023 presentation at Gagosian. Trained in Belgium and later influenced by the legacy of American abstraction after relocating to New York in 2007, Ancart’s work merges a European sensibility with the expressive freedom of postwar American painting. </div> <div>Harold Ancart’s <em>Untitled </em>(2015) reflects the artist’s poetic engagement with landscape and memory, created in the wake of his transformative 2014 cross-country road trip across the United States. During this journey, Ancart converted his car into a mobile studio, stopping spontaneously to sketch and record fleeting impressions of the natural environment. These observations informed a new body of work that magnified and abstracted ephemeral moments in the landscape, ultimately inspiring his first major institutional solo exhibition at The Menil Collection in Houston in 2016. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>In this painting, a luminous, stylized plant rises against a deep black ground, its elongated leaves rendered in radiant greens, yellows, and reds that appear to glow against the darkness. The composition balances graphic clarity with expressive spontaneity—gestural marks and splashes of color orbit the central form like fragments of light or drifting pollen. By isolating and enlarging a single botanical subject, Ancart transforms a fleeting natural encounter into a monumental image that feels both intimate and cosmic. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Plant imagery has remained a recurring motif throughout Ancart’s practice, reappearing in later exhibitions including his 2022–2023 presentation at Gagosian. Trained in Belgium and later influenced by the legacy of American abstraction after relocating to New York in 2007, Ancart’s work merges a European sensibility with the expressive freedom of postwar American painting. </div> <div>Harold Ancart’s <em>Untitled </em>(2015) reflects the artist’s poetic engagement with landscape and memory, created in the wake of his transformative 2014 cross-country road trip across the United States. During this journey, Ancart converted his car into a mobile studio, stopping spontaneously to sketch and record fleeting impressions of the natural environment. These observations informed a new body of work that magnified and abstracted ephemeral moments in the landscape, ultimately inspiring his first major institutional solo exhibition at The Menil Collection in Houston in 2016. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>In this painting, a luminous, stylized plant rises against a deep black ground, its elongated leaves rendered in radiant greens, yellows, and reds that appear to glow against the darkness. The composition balances graphic clarity with expressive spontaneity—gestural marks and splashes of color orbit the central form like fragments of light or drifting pollen. By isolating and enlarging a single botanical subject, Ancart transforms a fleeting natural encounter into a monumental image that feels both intimate and cosmic. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Plant imagery has remained a recurring motif throughout Ancart’s practice, reappearing in later exhibitions including his 2022–2023 presentation at Gagosian. Trained in Belgium and later influenced by the legacy of American abstraction after relocating to New York in 2007, Ancart’s work merges a European sensibility with the expressive freedom of postwar American painting. </div> <div>Harold Ancart’s <em>Untitled </em>(2015) reflects the artist’s poetic engagement with landscape and memory, created in the wake of his transformative 2014 cross-country road trip across the United States. During this journey, Ancart converted his car into a mobile studio, stopping spontaneously to sketch and record fleeting impressions of the natural environment. These observations informed a new body of work that magnified and abstracted ephemeral moments in the landscape, ultimately inspiring his first major institutional solo exhibition at The Menil Collection in Houston in 2016. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>In this painting, a luminous, stylized plant rises against a deep black ground, its elongated leaves rendered in radiant greens, yellows, and reds that appear to glow against the darkness. The composition balances graphic clarity with expressive spontaneity—gestural marks and splashes of color orbit the central form like fragments of light or drifting pollen. By isolating and enlarging a single botanical subject, Ancart transforms a fleeting natural encounter into a monumental image that feels both intimate and cosmic. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Plant imagery has remained a recurring motif throughout Ancart’s practice, reappearing in later exhibitions including his 2022–2023 presentation at Gagosian. Trained in Belgium and later influenced by the legacy of American abstraction after relocating to New York in 2007, Ancart’s work merges a European sensibility with the expressive freedom of postwar American painting. </div> <div>Harold Ancart’s <em>Untitled </em>(2015) reflects the artist’s poetic engagement with landscape and memory, created in the wake of his transformative 2014 cross-country road trip across the United States. During this journey, Ancart converted his car into a mobile studio, stopping spontaneously to sketch and record fleeting impressions of the natural environment. These observations informed a new body of work that magnified and abstracted ephemeral moments in the landscape, ultimately inspiring his first major institutional solo exhibition at The Menil Collection in Houston in 2016. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>In this painting, a luminous, stylized plant rises against a deep black ground, its elongated leaves rendered in radiant greens, yellows, and reds that appear to glow against the darkness. The composition balances graphic clarity with expressive spontaneity—gestural marks and splashes of color orbit the central form like fragments of light or drifting pollen. By isolating and enlarging a single botanical subject, Ancart transforms a fleeting natural encounter into a monumental image that feels both intimate and cosmic. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Plant imagery has remained a recurring motif throughout Ancart’s practice, reappearing in later exhibitions including his 2022–2023 presentation at Gagosian. Trained in Belgium and later influenced by the legacy of American abstraction after relocating to New York in 2007, Ancart’s work merges a European sensibility with the expressive freedom of postwar American painting. </div> <div>Harold Ancart’s <em>Untitled </em>(2015) reflects the artist’s poetic engagement with landscape and memory, created in the wake of his transformative 2014 cross-country road trip across the United States. During this journey, Ancart converted his car into a mobile studio, stopping spontaneously to sketch and record fleeting impressions of the natural environment. These observations informed a new body of work that magnified and abstracted ephemeral moments in the landscape, ultimately inspiring his first major institutional solo exhibition at The Menil Collection in Houston in 2016. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>In this painting, a luminous, stylized plant rises against a deep black ground, its elongated leaves rendered in radiant greens, yellows, and reds that appear to glow against the darkness. The composition balances graphic clarity with expressive spontaneity—gestural marks and splashes of color orbit the central form like fragments of light or drifting pollen. By isolating and enlarging a single botanical subject, Ancart transforms a fleeting natural encounter into a monumental image that feels both intimate and cosmic. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Plant imagery has remained a recurring motif throughout Ancart’s practice, reappearing in later exhibitions including his 2022–2023 presentation at Gagosian. Trained in Belgium and later influenced by the legacy of American abstraction after relocating to New York in 2007, Ancart’s work merges a European sensibility with the expressive freedom of postwar American painting. </div>
Sin títuloRealizada en 2015112 x 80 pulgadas(284,48 x 203,2 cm) Lápiz de óleo y lápiz sobre lienzo montado sobre madera, en marco elegido por el artista
Procedencia
CLEARING, Nueva York
Colección privada, adquirida en la subasta mencionada, 2015
Sotheby's, Nueva York, 12 de octubre de 2023, lote 14
Colección privada, adquirida en la subasta mencionada
La obra «Sin título» (2015) de Harold Ancart refleja la relación poética del artista con el paisaje y la memoria, y fue creada a raíz de su transformador viaje por carretera a través de los Estados Unidos en 2014. Durante este viaje, Ancart convirtió su coche en un estudio móvil, deteniéndose de forma espontánea para dibujar y plasmar impresiones fugaces del entorno natural. Estas observaciones dieron lugar a una nueva serie de obras que magnificaban y abstraían momentos efímeros del paisaje, lo que finalmente inspiró su primera gran exposición individual institucional en The Menil Collection de Houston en 2016.





En este cuadro, una planta luminosa y estilizada se eleva sobre un fondo negro intenso, con sus hojas alargadas representadas en verdes, amarillos y rojos radiantes que parecen brillar contra la oscuridad. La composición equilibra la claridad gráfica con la espontaneidad expresiva: marcas gestuales y salpicaduras de color orbitan alrededor de la forma central como fragmentos de luz o polen a la deriva. Al aislar y ampliar un único motivo botánico, Ancart transforma un fugaz encuentro con la naturaleza en una imagen monumental que resulta a la vez íntima y cósmica.


 


La imaginería vegetal ha sido un motivo recurrente a lo largo de la trayectoria de Ancart, reapareciendo en exposiciones posteriores, incluida su presentación de 2022-2023 en Gagosian. Formado en Bélgica y posteriormente influenciado por el legado de la abstracción estadounidense tras trasladarse a Nueva York en 2007, la obra de Ancart fusiona la sensibilidad europea con la libertad expresiva de la pintura estadounidense de la posguerra.
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