Alexander Archipenko (1887-1964)
Alexander Archipenko (1887-1964)

Dancers, Version 3

細節
Alexander Archipenko (1887-1964)
Dancers, Version 3
signed, dated and inscribed 'Archipenko 1912 V.3' (on the top of the base), and numbered '3/8' (on the side of the base)
bronze with gold patina
Height: 24½ in. (62.3 cm.)
Conceived in 1912; this bronze version cast circa 1960-1964
來源
Perls Gallery, New York.
Frances Archipenko Gray, Bearsville, New York.
Rachel Adler Fine Art, New York.
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1994.
出版
The Sketch, London, October 1913 (plaster version illustrated on the cover, titled The Dance).
"Alexander Archipenko," Sturm Bilderbucher II, 1917, p. 16 (another cast illustrated).
V. Huszar, De Stijl, Amsterdam, January 1917 (another cast illustrated, p. 34, titled De Dans).
H. Hildebrandt, Alexander Archipenko, son oeuvre, Berlin, 1923, pp. 11-12 (another cast illustrated, pl. 12).
R. Schacht, Alexander Archipenko, Sturm-Bilderbucher II, Berlin, 1924, p. 10 (another cast illustrated, pl. 9).
H. Walden, Einblick in Kunst, Berlin, 1924, p. 13 (another cast illustrated).
A. Archipenko, Archipenko, Fifty Creative Years: 1908-1958, New York, 1960, p. 58 (another cast illustrated, pl. 172, titled Dance).
G. Sangiorgi and G. Severini, "La Pittura scultorea di Archipenko," Civiltà delle Macchine, September-October 1963, p. 39 (another cast illustrated).
D.H. Karshan, "Alexander Archipenko in Retrospect," Journal of the Archives of American Art, April 1967, pp. 5 and 15 (another cast illustrated).
F.S. Wight, "Retrospective for Archipenko," Art in America, May-June 1967, p. 66 (another cast illustrated).
D.H. Karshan, "Archipenko," Arts Magazine, vol. 42, no. 6, April 1968, pp. 36-38 (another cast illustrated, p. 37; titled Dance).
D.H. Karshan, Archipenko, International Visionary, Washington, D.C., 1969, p. 114, no. 12 (another cast illustrated, p. 34).
D.H. Karshan, "Les revolutions d'Alexander Archipenko," Plaiser de France, no. 420, July 1974, pp. 12-17 (another cast illustrated, p. 15, pl. 18).
D.H. Karshan, Archipenko: The Sculpture and Graphic Art, Including a Print Catalogue Raisonné, Boulder, 1974 (another cast illustrated, pl. 22, titled Danse).
K.J. Michaelsen, Archipenko: A Study of the Early Works, 1908-1920, New York and London, 1977, p. 170, no. S40.
D.H. Karshan, Archipenko: Sculptures, Drawings and Prints 1908-1963, Danville, Kentucky, 1985, p. 34, no. 14 (another cast illustrated, pp. 48-49).
A. Barth, Alexander Archipenkos Plastisches Oeuvre, Frankfurt, 1997, vol. II, pp. 96 and 98, no. 44 (another cast illustrated, pp. 97 and 99).
展覽
New York, Rachel Adler Gallery, Designs for the Avant-Garde Theater, April-May 1992, no. 21.
Emden, Kunsthalle in Emden, and Munich, Haus der Kunst, Tanzinder Modérne. Von Matisse bis Schlemmer, October 1996-April 1997, no. 2.
Roslyn, New York, Nassau County Museum of Art, Dance, Dance, Dance, June-September 2000.

拍品專文

The Archipenko Foundation intends to list this work in their proposed Archipenko catalogue raisonné.

Alexander Archipenko was a sculptural innovator whose work combined an innate feeling for elegant forms with a respect for traditional motifs. By 1912, Archipenko began to create sculptures that rejected the traditionally held view that space was a kind of frame around the mass of the object. Looking back on this revolutionary phase in his work Archipenko wrote, "In the beginning, in experimenting with the volumes of material in their relationship to the volumes of space, I tried to combine them in different ways. I extended material forms from the center of the composition into space [The Kiss, 1911, and Two Bodies, 1912]. In another experiment [Dancers] I encircled space with the material forms of the two figures...This was the beginning of the creative consciousness producing a form of space with symbolic meaning" (A. Archipenko, op. cit., pp. 56 and 58). Inspired by Archipenko's 1913 sculpture La tête the poet Blaise Cendrars penned the phrase "mouvement perpetuel", which seems equally applicable to the dynamic movement of Dancers. As Katherine Jánszky Michaelsen notes, "To conceive of sculpture in this way, as a framing device for space, with space not only taking an active role, but, one might say, becoming the very reason for the sculpture, was unprecedented" (Alexander Archipenko: A Centennial Tribute; exh. cat., Washington D. C., 1986, p. 30).

Dancers, also known as Dance, marked "the first time in modern sculpture [where] a spatial environment is defined by encirclement through the use of opened, outstretched, architectonic forms that appear to join by abutment rather than by fusion; a precursor of a constructivist syntax" (D. Karshan, op. cit., 1985, p. 34). It understandably provoked lively debate within artistic circles when it was exhibited in Berlin at Der Sturm in September 1913. While the English magazine The Sketch derided it on the cover of its 29 October 1913 issue, the second issue of the January 1917 edition of De Stijl featured a detailed diagram of the sculpture that analyzed its formal construction and praised the inherent motion of the work. According to Donald Karshan, the first version of Dancers was in plaster, measured 24 inches and was conceived in 1912. The second version, 3 inches larger, was most likely a reconstruction created in 1955, and the third version, of which the present bronze is an example, most likely dates from 1960.