Hans Hartung: Paintings 1960's-1970's

Hans Hartung: Paintings 1960's-1970's

Hong Kong Hong Kong, China Thursday, February 16, 2012–Friday, March 30, 2012


t1975-e18 by hans hartung

Hans Hartung

T1975-E18, 1975

Sold

t1974-e10 by hans hartung

Hans Hartung

T1974-E10, 1974

Sold

t1973-h42 by hans hartung

Hans Hartung

T1973-H42, 1973

Sold

t1966-h32 by hans hartung

Hans Hartung

T1966-H32, 1966

Sold

t1965-h31 by hans hartung

Hans Hartung

T1965-H31, 1965

Sold

t1962-h28 by hans hartung

Hans Hartung

T1962-H28, 1962

Sold

t1962-h24 by hans hartung

Hans Hartung

T1962-H24, 1962

Sold

de Sarthe Gallery is pleased to announce a landmark exhibition of Hans Hartung’s paintings.This is the first showing of Hartung’s works in Hong Kong although, Hans Hartung’s work is no stranger to Asia as he has been exhibited at the Taiwan Museum of Art, Taichung in 1997, the Aichi Prefectural Museum of Art, Nagoya, Japan in 1998 and the Palais des beaux-arts, Beijing and the National Museum, Nanjing in 2005.This exhibition features 7 major large paintings from 1962 to 1975. The exhibition will focus on the works from the early 60s onwards which demonstrate a new period characterized by scrapings in the still wet paint which allows the canvas to show through. This exhibition will also focus on Hartung’s connection to calligraphy as demonstrated in the text by Professor Lao Zhu, included in the catalogue of the de Sarthe Gallery exhibition. The appearance of interlacing and extremely delicate undulations which are tangled, give the illusion of bars, scratching and streaks. The lines gradually disappear replaced by dark masses — like threatening smoke — without any graphic character, whose tones are superimposed against a lighter background, on large canvases.Hartung’s work becomes stripped of any reference to the exterior world or anything that might reflect a state of mind, «we enter,” Hartung tell us, “the unknown, a zone that has yet to be created… internal movements can be a basis, just an incitement… » In 1969 Hartung started to use, for the first time, vibrant colors such as lemon yellows, intense blues, brick reds, light greens and the ever present black, lending expression to a poetic inspiration which commands the gesture.The show will be accompanied by a full-color catalogue with an essay by Professor Lao Zhu, Beijing University, Beijing, China.