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Sam Francis - Transatlantique
Pierre Wat invites height artists from both sides of the Atlantic to share their views of Sam Francis.
The American painter Sam Francis, associated with the second generation of abstract expressionists, is an artist of color and light whose work is strongly marked by spiritual, philosophical, and pictorial issues. A Transatlantique artist, Francis lived and worked in the United States, France, Japan, Mexico, and Switzerland. Art historian Pierre Wat invites eight artists to cast an eye on this fundamental work of the 20th century.
Pierre Wat (born 1965) is a Professor of Contemporary Art History at Panthéon–Sorbonne University, Paris. A specialist in European romanticism, he has published Naissance de l'art romantique (Flammarion, 1998, réédition 2013), Constable (Hazan, 2002), Turner, menteur magnifique (Hazan, 2010), Pérégrinations. Paysages entre nature et histoire (Hazan, 2017), and Hans Hartung, la peinture pour mémoire (Hazan, 2019). He is also the author of studies on contemporary artists: Pierre Buraglio (Flammarion, 2001), Claude Viallat (Hazan, 2006), Frédéric Benrath (Hazan, 2016). His long relationship with the Jean Fournier Gallery and its founder has been essential to his approach to abstract painting. He was guest curator of the Nicolas de Staël retrospective at the Musée d'Art Moderne, Paris, 2023; then at the Fondation de l'Hermitage, Lausanne, 2024.
American artist Sam Francis (1923-1994) is a representative of non-figurative painting and more particularly of Action Painting in the United States, a movement in which the very act of painting is carried out without any preconceived idea of the final result. It is the act, the gesture of the artist, that takes precedence.
In 1943, he enlisted as an aviator in the air force, but in 1944 his plane crashed in the middle of the desert. He was hospitalised for two years with a spinal injury and began to paint during his convalescence, convinced of the therapeutic virtues of art. After leaving the hospital, he began studying art at Berkeley and in 1946 he left for San Francisco to take classes with Clyfford Still, an artist he had discovered at an exhibition.
Sam Francis sought to convey an impression of infinity, a space without beginning or end. His works are then only pieces of an infinity that continues well beyond the canvas. In this way he goes beyond the very notion of a frame. Figures and background must occupy the entirety of the pictorial space, diluting to make room for depth.
In some of his paintings, this "dissolution" of the figure goes so far as to make it liquid, resulting in vertical flows of paint, similar to a spider's web, a network linking the spots together. This is followed by a thorough research on light. He was preoccupied by the two contradictory states of light: black, the original background from which the light emerges, and white, the basis of light and the sum of the colours.
He sought to achieve the right balance since, according to him, "an increase in light leads to an increase in darkness". This is why he experimented with the superimposition of "veils of colour" which allowed him to attenuate the intensity of the light. His painting is not fixed. The irregular shape of the spots and the unevenness of the colour in tones and shades give an impression of movement.
Edited by Pierre Wat.
Contributions by Stéphane Bordarier, Damien Cabanes, Claire Chesnier, Vicky Colombet, Marc Desgrandchamps, Richard Long, Emmanuel Van der Meulen, Claude Viallat.

Graphic design: Catherine Barluet and Jean François Maurige.
 
published in June 2024
bilingual edition (English / French)
10 x 19 cm (softcover)
144 pages
 
20.00
 
ISBN : 978-2-493808-06-6
EAN : 9782493808066
 
in stock


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