返回

哈罗德·安卡特(生于1980年)

$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>
无题创作于2015年112 x 80 英寸(284.48 x 203.2 厘米) 油棒与铅笔绘于木质底板上的画布,装裱于艺术家自选画框中
种源
CLEARING,纽约
私人收藏,2015年购自上述机构
苏富比,纽约,2023年10月12日,第14号拍品
私人收藏,购自上述拍卖会
哈罗德·安卡特(Harold Ancart)的《无题》(2015)反映了艺术家对风景与记忆的诗意探索,该作品创作于他2014年那次改变人生的横跨美国公路之旅之后。在这段旅程中,安卡特将自己的汽车改造成移动画室,随时随地停下脚步,通过素描记录自然环境中转瞬即逝的印象。 这些观察催生了一系列新作,将风景中转瞬即逝的瞬间放大并抽象化,最终促成了他于2016年在休斯顿梅尼尔收藏馆(The Menil Collection)举办的首次重要机构个展。





在这幅画作中,一株光彩夺目、风格化的植物从深邃的黑色背景中拔地而起,其修长的叶片以璀璨的绿、黄、红色呈现,仿佛在黑暗中熠熠生辉。 画面构图在图形的清晰度与表现的即兴性之间取得了平衡——那些富有表现力的笔触与飞溅的色彩,如同光之碎片或飘散的花粉般环绕着中央主体。通过将单一植物主题孤立并放大,安卡特将一次转瞬即逝的自然邂逅转化为一幅既亲密又宏大的图像。


 


植物意象始终是安卡特创作中反复出现的主题,在后续展览中屡见不鲜,包括他在2022至2023年于高古轩画廊的个展。安卡特在比利时接受艺术训练,2007年移居纽约后深受美国抽象艺术传统的影响,其作品融合了欧洲的审美情趣与战后美国绘画的表达自由。
询问