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TEFAF Maastricht: Stand 447-449

Past exhibition
14 - 19 March 2026
Nicolas Schoffer, Relief Spatiodynamique, 1951
Nicolas Schoffer, Relief Spatiodynamique, 1951

Nicolas Schoffer

Relief Spatiodynamique, 1951
Aluminum and plastic assemblage
58.7 x 36.5 x 9.8 cm
23 1/8 x 14 3/8 x 3 7/8 inches
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Further images

  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 1 ) herman de vries, perlgras - melica, coll. 14.05.2005 bei heumannsknuck, 2005
  • (View a larger image of thumbnail 2 ) herman de vries, perlgras - melica, coll. 14.05.2005 bei heumannsknuck, 2005
Around 1951, the Hungarian born Schöffer made circa 6 Spatiodynamic reliefs. Some of them are illustrated in the exhibition catalogue of the Schöffer show in 2016 in the Kunsthalle, Budapest....
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Around 1951, the Hungarian born Schöffer made circa 6 Spatiodynamic reliefs. Some of them are illustrated in the exhibition catalogue of the Schöffer show in 2016 in the Kunsthalle, Budapest. and in Jean Cassou, Guy Habasque and Jacques Ménétrier’s book about Nicolas Schoffer from 1963.


Habasque writes (p.10);

“It was in 1948 that he really found himself. After a few years of exploration (..) he became convinced that art could not limit itself to depicting moods or combining free forms, and came to the conclusion that the most important plastic values were space – the raw material of sculpture- and dynamism. The essential conquest of our technical civilisation.

Associating these in the meaningful designation “spatiodynamism”, he set out to develop them in sculpture to the maximum. Instead of circumscribing or suggesting portions of space- hollow volumes, so to speak, like those of Pevsner and Gabo, who before him had already confirmed the value of the active void, Schöffer rejected large continuous surfaces and had recourse to a preliminary skeleton or frame, as basic element which delimited and marked out the space that he wished encompass at the same time that it determined the general rhythm of the work.

This primacy of the skeleton was and remains essential for, executed as it is in slender iron bars, it does not block the view, and the sculpture thus becomes, according the artist’s own terms, ”airy, transparent and penetrable”.

Formerly in the collection of Nelly van Doesburg, this elegant early Spatiodynamic relief is one of the few works with non-moving elements.

Nanette Rothschild recalled (op cit. p. 73) how they, during a visit to Nelly van Doesburg in Meudon, bought a 1921 Mondrian Compostion with Red, Yellow and Blue and this small early construction from Nicolas Schöffer, then a young man whom she was helping to establish.

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Provenance

Nelly van Doesburg, Meudon
Nannette and Herbert Rothschild, New York and Ossining, 1955
By descent from the above to the present owners

Exhibitions

Paris, Galerie Colette Allendy, 1953
Providence, Annmary Brown Memorial, Brown University and Rhode Island School of Design Museum of Art, Herbert and Nannette Rothschild Collection, October - November 1966, no. 137 (illustrated)
Jersey City, Art Museum, Saint Peter's College, summer 1972

Literature

G.H. Marcus, ed., Encounters with Modern Art, The Reminiscences of Nanette F. Rothschild, Works from the Rothschild Family Collections, exh. cat., National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., 1996, pp. 73 and 33, illustrated, fig. 50
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