12th Jun, 2024 12:00

Fine Paintings, Works on Paper & Sculpture

 
  Lot 69
 

69

LYNN CHADWICK (BRITISH 1914-2003)

RAD LAD III
signed and numbered Chadwick 2/3 363
bronze
height: 43cm; 17in

Property from a Private Collection, West London

Executed in 1961. Sarah Chadwick, the artist's daughter, has confirmed that the present work is recorded in the Chadwick archive as Chadwick 2/3 363 and was cast in an edition of four.

Provenance
Marlborough Fine Art Ltd, London
Purchased from the above by the mother of the present owner 13th August 1965

Exhibited
London, Marlborough Fine Art, Summer Exhibition, 1965, no.13

Literature
Dennis Farr and Éva Chadwick, Lynn Chadwick Sculptor, With a Complete Illustrated Catalogue 1947-2003, London, 2014, p. 199, no. 363

In Rad Lad III a rugged and ridged head and body sit on three angular, tapering legs, the rough geometric form half human, half robot. Chadwick's light-hearted title - an abbreviation for 'radiator man' or plumber - refers to the work's corrugated surfaces, but belies the more insidious presence the bronze's spectre-like form suggests. Other more prescient titles he gave to similar sculptures of single figures he completed in the early 1960s included Watcher, Detector and Inquisitor. Such labels of monitoring and surveillance reference the perceived existential threats present in the geo-politics of the day, when the Russian-American Cold War was entrenched, the Cuban Missile crisis was threatening, the Berlin Wall under construction and the horrors of the Vietnam War were unfolding.

Chadwick's developing interest in casting in bronze followed a formidably successful decade of development, beginning with his first solo show at Gimpel Fils in Mayfair in 1950, three separate large scale commissions for the Festival of Britain in 1951 and inclusion both in the Battersea Park Open Air Sculpture Exhibition, and the exhibition American Abstraction in New York the same year. In 1952 he was featured as one of eight young emerging British sculptors in the Venice Biennale, others included Kenneth Armitage, Reg Butler, Eduardo Paolozzi and William Turnbull. His meteoric rise continued when in 1956 he represented Britain at the Venice Biennale, winning the International Sculpture Prize against the favourite Alberto Giacometti.

Sold for £26,000


 

RAD LAD III
signed and numbered Chadwick 2/3 363
bronze
height: 43cm; 17in

Property from a Private Collection, West London

Executed in 1961. Sarah Chadwick, the artist's daughter, has confirmed that the present work is recorded in the Chadwick archive as Chadwick 2/3 363 and was cast in an edition of four.

Provenance
Marlborough Fine Art Ltd, London
Purchased from the above by the mother of the present owner 13th August 1965

Exhibited
London, Marlborough Fine Art, Summer Exhibition, 1965, no.13

Literature
Dennis Farr and Éva Chadwick, Lynn Chadwick Sculptor, With a Complete Illustrated Catalogue 1947-2003, London, 2014, p. 199, no. 363

In Rad Lad III a rugged and ridged head and body sit on three angular, tapering legs, the rough geometric form half human, half robot. Chadwick's light-hearted title - an abbreviation for 'radiator man' or plumber - refers to the work's corrugated surfaces, but belies the more insidious presence the bronze's spectre-like form suggests. Other more prescient titles he gave to similar sculptures of single figures he completed in the early 1960s included Watcher, Detector and Inquisitor. Such labels of monitoring and surveillance reference the perceived existential threats present in the geo-politics of the day, when the Russian-American Cold War was entrenched, the Cuban Missile crisis was threatening, the Berlin Wall under construction and the horrors of the Vietnam War were unfolding.

Chadwick's developing interest in casting in bronze followed a formidably successful decade of development, beginning with his first solo show at Gimpel Fils in Mayfair in 1950, three separate large scale commissions for the Festival of Britain in 1951 and inclusion both in the Battersea Park Open Air Sculpture Exhibition, and the exhibition American Abstraction in New York the same year. In 1952 he was featured as one of eight young emerging British sculptors in the Venice Biennale, others included Kenneth Armitage, Reg Butler, Eduardo Paolozzi and William Turnbull. His meteoric rise continued when in 1956 he represented Britain at the Venice Biennale, winning the International Sculpture Prize against the favourite Alberto Giacometti.

Auction: Fine Paintings, Works on Paper & Sculpture, 12th Jun, 2024

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Sunday 9th June: 12:00pm to 4:00pm

Monday 10th June: 10:00am to 8:00pm

Tuesday 11th June: 10:00am to 5:00pm

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