Beatrice Wood Mixed Media "but You Must Not" (1984) - May 17, 2024 | Artemis Gallery In Co
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Beatrice Wood Mixed Media "But You Must Not" (1984)

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Beatrice Wood Mixed Media "But You Must Not" (1984)
Beatrice Wood Mixed Media "But You Must Not" (1984)
Item Details
Description
Beatrice Wood (also known as Beatrice Beato Wood - American, 1893-1998). "But You Must Not" mixed media (graphite, watercolor, crayon, and colored pencil) on paper, 1984. Signed and dated with title at lower right. An enticing mixed media composition by Beatrice "Beato" Wood, a legendary artist known as the "Mama of Dada" for her pivotal role in the New York Dada group as well as her romantic relationship with Marcel Duchamp. As a visual artist, Beato was probably best known for her pioneering work as a ceramicist; however, she also created robust drawings throughout her career - beginning around 1920 with her early Dada experiments and continuing until her death at age 105. "But You Must Not" is a dramatic depiction of 2 figures in an animated conversation with the partial torso of another figure appearing to listen in while passing by below. Impressively, Beato created "But You Must Not" when she was 91 years young! Complete with a preparatory drawing on verso. Size of image: 13.5" W x 16.75" H (34.3 cm x 42.5 cm); of matte: 19.25" W x 23" H (48.9 cm x 58.4 cm)

Luce Artist Biography: "Beatrice Wood fled her affluent home and proper upbringing to become an actress, artist, and writer. She was an outspoken and determined young woman who became known as the 'mama of dada' because of her involvement with the Dada artists and Marcel Duchamp. Wood began working with ceramics in 1933 when she took a class at Hollywood High School in California. She is recognized as a pioneer in experimenting with shining luster glazes, which became a trademark of her pottery. Wood had an insatiable love of life, romance and art, and worked at her wheel every day up until she was one hundred and three years old."

Despite being an accomplished artist and a pioneer of Dada in her own right, Wood's romantic involvement with Duchamp has largely overshadowed her artistic contributions. According to Alexxa Gotthardt, "Wood was indeed a lover of Duchamp, who she met in New York in 1916. They were part of a legendary menage-a-trois with Henri-Pierre Roche that would go on to inspire Francois Truffaut's French New Wave film, Jules et Jim (1962). More significantly, though, they had a lifelong creative dialogue that, in its first year, helped shape Dada.

Though a 1993 documentary later dubbed Wood the 'Mama of Dada,' she is rarely listed among the movement's pioneers. But in 1917, both she and Duchamp submitted works to the Society of Independent Artists' first exhibition, which would double as Dada's coming out. While Duchamp's contribution to the show - a found urinal turned on its head and titled Fountain (1917) - would later be seen as a watershed moment in the history of modern art, it was Wood's Un peut (peu) d'eau dans du savon (1917) that caused public uproar at the time.

'She was sort of the sensation of the show,' explains Francis Naumann, a Dada scholar, dealer, and dear friend of Wood's. 'Her work was attacked by the press.' The offending painting showed a woman's naked torso with a real piece of soap affixed 'at a very tactical position,' Wood would later explain. She and Duchamp also founded the seminal Dada journal, The Blind Man, with Roche. In one issue, Wood penned an article defending Duchamp's Fountain. 'The only works of art America has given are her plumbing and her bridges,' she mused. The quote is often erroneously attributed to Duchamp himself.

While Duchamp no doubt served as a mentor to Wood, her rebellious creativity didn't start - or end - with him. 'Beatrice was a romantic, but she never allowed a man to control her life - ever,' explains Naumann. 'She paid her own bills from the very beginning to the end.'" ("The Forgotten Legacy of Cult California Artist Beatrice Wood" Artsy Editorial August 1, 2016)

Provenance: private Los Angeles, California, USA collection

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#186158
Condition
Signed and dated with title at lower right. Preparatory sketch for "But You Must Not" on verso of paper. Set behind glass in custom matte with foamboard backing. Some wear to matte and faint marks to glass, but mixed media composition is in excellent overall condition.
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Beatrice Wood Mixed Media "But You Must Not" (1984)

Estimate $800 - $1,200
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Starting Price $400
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Artemis Gallery

Artemis Gallery

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Louisville, CO, United States7,954 Followers
Auction Curated By
Bob Dodge
Owner/Executive Director, Antiquities & Pre-Columbian Art
Sydelle Dienstfrey
PhD. Art History, Director, Fine & Visual Arts
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