Leon Kossoff (b. 1926)
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… Read more
Leon Kossoff (b. 1926)

Small Head of Rosalind II

Details
Leon Kossoff (b. 1926)
Small Head of Rosalind II
oil on board
9½ x 8¾ in. (24.1 x 22.2 cm.)
Painted in 1981.
Provenance
with Bernard Jacobson Gallery, London, 1989, where purchased by May Gruber.
Literature
Exhibition catalogue, Leon Kossoff. Recent Work, London, Fischer Fine Art, 1984, p. 11, exhibition not numbered, illustrated.
Exhibited
London, Fischer Fine Art, Leon Kossoff. Recent Work, March - April 1984, exhibition not numbered: this exhibition travelled to California, Los Angeles, L.A. Louver Gallery, November - December 1984.
London, Bernard Jacobson Gallery, The Battle for Realism, September - October 2001, no. 5.
Special notice
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent. These lots have been imported from outside the EU for sale using a Temporary Import regime. Import VAT is payable (at 5%) on the Hammer price. VAT is also payable (at 20%) on the buyer’s Premium on a VAT inclusive basis. When a buyer of such a lot has registered an EU address but wishes to export the lot or complete the import into another EU country, he must advise Christie's immediately after the auction.

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Pippa Jacomb
Pippa Jacomb

Lot Essay

'Every time the model sits everything has changed. You have changed, she has changed. The light has changed, the balance has changed. The directions you try to remember are no longer there and, whether working from the model or landscape drawings, everything has to be reconstructed daily, many many times. It’s my way of keeping the drawing in the painting alive, of being prepared to respond to the unexpected way. As time goes by the subject seems to take over my inner life. I begin to make extra associations and the need to finish becomes more urgent. A painter is engaged in a working process and the work is concerned with making the paint relate to his experience of seeing and being in the world’ (L. Kossoff, quoted in exhibition catalogue, ‘Leon Kossoff’, XLVI Venice Biennale, Venice, British Pavilion, 1995, pp. 25-26).

Instilled with a sense of a constant metamorphosis, this work, Small Head of Rosalind II is an exquisitely rendered portrait of Kossoff’s wife, Rosalind (also known as Peggy), whom he married in 1953, and is one of his most important and regular models. Painting for Kossoff is an intellectual process that requires an incessant reworking. Depicting his sitters from life, the artist would often take months, or even years to complete a work of art. Kossoff had a deep interest and understanding of the variations that occurred to his sitter through a change of space and time: whether it was a difference in attitude, a revelation of character, or viewing the sitter from a new angle. Kossoff endeavoured to capture these different facets through the continual return to his painting – scraping back the paint and occasionally pressing wet newspaper against the painting to leave a residue of the image on the work. The artist alluded ‘I never know when a painting is finished. I stop when I can’t go on or when the painting begins to look like the drawing made on that day or when the image opens up a dialogue with the possibility of starting another version’ (L. Kossoff, quoted in exhibition catalogue, Leon Kossoff, New York, Annandale Galleries, 2002, p. 2).

The expressiveness of the physicality of the paint acts as a form of emotional release. For Kossoff painting becomes a cathartic act: the mounds and ridges representative of fluctuating feelings, an almost personal confession of the artist, holding some sort of special truth, presence, and passion spent.

In the present work, Kossoff has laboured over the painting to such an extent that the paint has become a thick impasto, heavily laden with swathes of luxurious paint, the mass of layers of oil creating a depth and texture. The expression and features of Rosalind’s face are rendered through wedges; the result is as much sculpted as it is painted. The highly dexterous and vigorous brushstrokes brings the viewer into almost direct contact with the sitter portrayed, instilling an intimacy between the viewer and her. Rosalind’s head, so closely framed, is rendered through the impassioned, deliberate brushstrokes that suggest a familiarity and tenderness one bestows only upon a cherished relation. One finds that the focused inquiry on the face is all that is necessary, to understand the sitter, the head becomes symbolic of her entirety, the mind, the body and the soul.

This painting will be included in the forthcoming publication Leon Kossoff: Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil Paintings edited by Andrea Rose, with research by Andrew Dempsey and Stephanie Farmer, to be published by Modern Art Press.

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