Skip to main content
Lot 19*,AR

Nikos Hadjikyriakos-Ghika
(Greek, 1906-1994)
Escarpments

24 November 2021, 14:00 CET
Paris, Rue de la Paix

Sold for €37,812.50 inc. premium

Own a similar item?

Submit your item online for a free auction estimate.

How to sell

Looking for a similar item?

Our Greek Art specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.

Find your local specialist

Nikos Hadjikyriakos-Ghika (Greek, 1906-1994)

Escarpments
signé et daté 'GHIKA 59' (en bas à droite)
huile sur toile
33 x 47cm (13 x 18 1/2in).
Peint en 1959.

signed and dated (lower right)
oil on canvas

Footnotes

Provenance
Lady Nöel Evelyn 'Peter' Norton, London.
Thence by descent to the present owner.

Exposé
Athens, Benaki Museum, N. Hadjikyriakos-Ghika, the Apollonian - the Dionysian, November 22, 2006 - January 15, 2007, no. 215 (illustrated in the exhibition catalogue, p. 219).

Littérature
K.C. Valkana, Nikos Hadjikyriakos-Ghika, His Painting Oeuvre, Benaki Museum, Athens 2011, p. 188 (mentioned), p. 193 (illustrated).

Imbued with the breath of the earth and the refractions of Greek light, Escarpments is a captivating work of dynamic lines, lush colours and explosive forms that spin and swirl around agile webs, so that the whole composition seems like an ever-growing organism immersed in a constantly changing and revived atmosphere.1 Trees, branches, leaves, bushes and flowers are set in motion, engaged in a perpetual Dionysian dance, while the crooked stone walls that inform so much of the Greek insular landscape and rank among the painter's signature subjects, emerge like ancient ruins from the luxuriant flora.

1 See D. Iliopoulou-Rogan, N. Hadjikyriakos-Ghika, the Apollonian-the Dionysian, exhibition catalogue, Benaki Museum, Athens 2006, p. 52.

Imprégnée du souffle de la terre et des réfractions de la lumière grecque, Escapments est une œuvre captivante, faite de lignes dynamiques, de couleurs luxuriantes et de formes explosives qui s'enroulent et tourbillonnent autour de points agiles, de telle sorte que toute la composition ressemble à un organisme en perpétuelle croissance, immergé dans une atmosphère qui ne cesserait de se transformer et de revivre. Les arbres, les branches, les feuilles, les buissons et les fleurs sont représentés en mouvement, engagés dans une danse dyonisiaque perpétuelle, tandis que les murs de pierre tortueux, qui rappellent tant le paysage insulaire grec et font partie des thèmes récurrents de l'artiste, émergent comme des ruines antiques de la flore luxuriante.

Additional information

Bid now on these items