Lot 40 Details
Charles Pachter (b. 1942), Canadian
THE PAINTED FLAG, 1986
acrylic on canvas
signed and dated "86"; signed and dated "86" verso; inscribed "St. Rémy Oct 91-Jan 92; Bonn Apr-May 92; CN Tower Jun-Oct/95"
36 x 72 in — 91.4 x 182.9 cm
Estimate $40,000-$50,000
Additional Images
Provenance:
Acquired directly from the artist
Private Collection, Ontario
Literature:
Charles Pachter: La lumière ombre. Exh. cat. (Saint-Rémy-de-Provence: Centre d'Art Présence Van Gogh Art Contemporain, 1991), no. 8, frontispiece repro. col., 26 as Le Drapeau Peint.
Maclean's Special Issue: The Ties That Bind, Vol. 107, no. 27, 1 Jul 1994, cover repro. col.
Bogomila Welsh-Ovcharov, Charles Pachter, (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1992) 87 and colour plates 89-91 for other works from the 1981 The Painted Flag series.
Exhibited:
Charles Pachter: La lumière ombre, Centre d'art Présence Van Gogh Art Contemporain, Saint-Rémy-de-Provence, France, 12 Oct 1991-5 Jan 1992.
Licht im Schatten, Haus an der Redoute, Bonn, Germany, Apr-May 1992.
In Pachter's Orbit, 360 Revolving Restaurant, CN Tower, Toronto, ON, Jun-30 Sep 1995.
Note:
In her 1992 book, Charles Pachter, Bogomila Welsh-Ovcharov discusses the genesis of the Toronto artist’s depictions of Canada’s flag and compares Pachter’s The Painted Flag series, to the depictions of the American flag by American artist Jasper Johns:
“In June of 1980, Pachter began a series of paintings which later eclipsed his streetcar and Queen on moose themes in capturing the public imagination. After building an improvised flagpole on his Oro farm, he observed the different configurations produced by the rippling flag in rapid succession. He photographed hundreds of variations for later reference. This approach was different from that of American artist Jasper Johns, whose unmodulated grid-like studies of the American flag were seen less as patriotic symbols than as points of departure for formal abstractions. In contrast, Pachter painted the Canadian flag hovering in the air, observed from various angles and distances with emphasis on light and shadow.
By surrounding the chiaroscuro surface of the flag image with flat acrylic colour as background, Pachter showed an element of virtuosity comparable with Johns, who manipulated encaustic…to produce an effect of multi-layered translucency.
In variations on this theme, Pachter alternated the scale of the flag to pole, or abandoned the pole altogether. He also introduced different background shades of blue and improbable hues such as black and pink, suffusing The Painted Flags with an aura that extended far beyond the moment captured.”
Reference:
Bogomila Welsh-Ovcharov, Charles Pachter, (Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 1992), 87 and colour plates 89-91 for other works from the 1981 The Painted Flag series.
CONDITION DETAILS
Very good overall condition.
Small accretions bottom centre.
Dark marks along bottom edge have been spot tested by a conservator. Dark marks are not deposition. A conservation report is available upon request. Unframed.