L’architecte et le magicien

Drawing,Pastel,1950225 x 290 mm

ORIGINAL EDITION OF 200 NUMBERED COPIES ONLY
ACCOMPANIED BY FOUR LARGE ORIGINAL PASTELS FROM ATLANTIC

6 500 

1 in stock

Description

ORIGINAL EDITION OF 200 NUMBERED COPIES ONLY.

Handwritten text by Michel Ragon and 7 full-page drawings by Atlan reproduced as lithographs on helio paper in-4 shell.

"Atlan is the shaman of today's painting. "An isolated brand," Anatole Jakovsky defined him from his first exhibition in 1944. […] To understand Atlan, you have to understand that he's African. This explains, in part, the lines of its lines, its cacti and its saurian teeth. […] Its colours (its matt reds and ochres), are those of painted masks.
[…] I attach a particular importance to the painting of Atlan, because it seems to me a synthesis […] on the plastic level, of the three great movements that have dominated Art for forty years: expressionism, surrealism and abstraction."

THE COPY IS ACCOMPANIED BY A SKETCHBOOK CONTAINING FOUR ORIGINAL PASTELS FROM ATLANTIC, NOT SELECTED FOR THE BOOK.

Slightly larger than those reproduced in black (240 x 310 mm), the notebook includes three alternative colour versions of the title page and a pastel in black.

Two other black pastels from this series have been in the collections of the Centre Georges Pompidou since 2006 (AM 2006-834/35).

The copy is complete of the rare subscription form (4 pages, 180 x 215 mm) presenting the book as well as press extracts on Atlan's work.

BEAUTIFUL PACKAGE protected by a black paper shirt case.

 

 

 

Paris,Rougerie éditeur,1950.In-4, Sheets,225 x 290 mm,non-paginated [Text: 24 pages on double-folded sheets + Illustrations: 7 sheets].

Editorial paper folder titled in two colours. Drawing book: cover printed in black, handwritten mention "Published" in red.

Bio

Michel Ragon

(Marseille: 24 June 1924 - Suresnes: 14 February 2020)
French writer, art critic, literary critic and architectural historian.

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Bio

Jean-Michel Atlan

(Constantine; Algeria: 23 January 1913 - Paris: 12 February 1960 )

See The Works