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Pierre SOULAGES, Peinture 222 x 222cm, 15 mai 1987 , 1987

Pierre SOULAGES French, 1919-2022

Peinture 222 x 222cm, 15 mai 1987 , 1987
Oil on canvas, in two parts

left: 87 3/8 x 33 ½in. (222 x 85.2cm.)
right: 87 3/8 x 53 7/8in. (222 x 136.8cm.)
overall: 87 3/8 x 87 3/8in.(222 x 222cm.)
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It’s in 1978 that Pierre Soulages produced his first Outrenoir paintings, he was already at this point an internationally acclaimed artist. He stubbornly pursued his quest for the Outrenoir all his life. To this day, a few years after his death, the artist and his work fascinates.

With two joined canvases of different sizes of over four square meters, Peinture222 x 222 cm, 15 mai 1987 is a spectacular Outrenoir painting. The gleaming expanse of black and blue paint raked into rhythmic, reflective splendour, emphasising its near-sculptural objecthood.


‘A work’s reality is way more complex than its mere materiality: it’s the triple relationship that is established between the thing it is, me who made it, and the beholder’

Pierre Solages in P. Daix & J.J. Sweeney, Pierre Soulages: L'oeuvre 1947-1990, Neuchatel 1999


Soulages creates pictures that escape monochromy through the play of the reflected light, according to textures structured on the surface by various tools. He uses black no longer as a colour, but as a material that reveals light. Through a range of texture and density, Soulages created interactive surfaces that are full of life, constantly changing with ambient light and the position of the viewer. The artist gives to this type of painting the name Outrenoir. "Outrenoir to say: beyond black, a reflected light, transmuted by black. Outrenoir: black that ceases to be black becomes an emitter of light, of secret light. Outrenoir: a mental field other than simple black." (Pierre Soulages, «Les éclats du noir», entretien avec Pierre Encrevé, Soulages, Beaux-Arts Magazine, 1996.)



A torrent of broad, diagonal strokes, pulled across the thick pigment using a homemade spatula, covers much of the surface: mainly black, Soulages’s scraping action reveals flashes of abrilliant blue undercoat. This scintillating field has the inky lustre of a dark birdwing. Behind it, and revealed in a bare lower corner, a deep black ground is striated with a fine, dense horizontal grain.

From 1986, Soulages’s gradual introduction of blue – the colour of natural daylight – into his outrenoir works went hand in hand with an amplification of their scale, luminosity and textural force: Peinture 222 x 222 cm, 15 mai 1987 sees this late idiom at its majestic best.

While he is often hailed as the master of black, Soulages is perhaps more importantly a master of light. Peinture 222 x 222 cm, 15 mai 1987’s interplay of glossy, matt, rough, smooth, diagonal and horizontal textures shows Soulages exploiting his material’s reflective properties to ever greater variety and contrast.

‘It is the most intense, most violent absence of colour, which gives an intense and violent presence to colours, even to white: just as a tree makes the sky seem more blue.’

P. Soulages, quoted in J. Johnson Sweeney, Pierre Soulages, Neuchâtel 1972, p. 13.

Soulages works on the premise that our perception of colour is dependent on its shape, density and consistency: as such, it lies beyond the limits of language.

‘Gauguin already expressed it perfectly, when he said that a kilo of green is more green than a hundred grams of the same green. Quantity modifies quality. Then, when one says black, one also does not say whether it is round or square, angular or soft. Form modifies colour. Try cutting out of yellow paper, for example, a soft, rather rounded shape and an angular shape. Put them side by side. They will not look the same colour. There is an interaction between form and colour. So much for quantity and shape. But there is still density and texture. Black can be shiny or matte, smooth or grainy, and that changes everything’

P. Soulages, quoted in ‘Peindre la peinture’, Pierre Soulages: Outrenoir: Entretiens avec Françoise Jaunin, Lausanne 2014, pp. 12-13.


Each stroke of Peinture 222x 222 cm, 15 mai 1987 is thus conceived as a unique entity, cast in a play of endless variation with its neighbouring elements.

By using the same descriptive format for his titles – painting, dimensions, date – Soulages allows the viewer’s experience of the artwork to be guided solely by the dynamics of its abstract surface, ever-changing in the light.
The artist and writer Antonio Saura wrote a sensitive appreciation of their power in the catalogue for a 1989 show of Soulages’ works in Valencia. Where his previous canvases had often gained their impact through a contrast between blacks and paler tones – with strokes arranged in calligraphic bars, or layered in shadowy translucency – Saura saw dark, commanding works like Peinture 222 x 222 cm, 15 mai 1987 as arriving at a Zen-like new dimension of grandeur and poise.

‘Gone is the fixity of the movement of the earlier work; another movement appears in the recent paintings of Pierre Soulages, this time subtle and interior, present in the streaks that articulate the painted surface in their own dark matter. Gone is the “image”, consequence of the assembled forms in his non-representative painting; the serene emotion is reached without it, in the almost-nothing of these expanses of black … This is a minimal perversity that contradicts monochromatic minimalism: the surfaces are painted, and not only painted with traces of brush and spatula, but rather striped by an essence, as if demonstrating their belonging to the pictorial universe. The painting needs light in order to appear – not only for us to be able to contemplate it, but for it to exist ... The painting becomes something like the Buddhist garden of Ryoan-ji, a cosmic surface of combed sand, streaked with systematised, rectilinear traces that capture light’ A. Saura, Pierre Soulages, pinturas, exh. cat. Galería Fandos, Valencia 1989, unpaged



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Provenance

Galerie de France, Paris.
Galerie Bellier, Paris.
Anon. sale, Christian de Quay Paris, 20 June 1996, lot 264.
Private collection
Christie's London, Post war and Contemporary Art, 4 Oct. 2019
Private Collection

Exhibitions

Reutlingen, Hans Thoma-Gesellschaft, Pierre Soulages, 1987.
Munich, Galerie Rieder, Soulages, 1987.
Kassel, Fridericianum, Soulages: 40 ans de peinture, 1989, p. 96, no. 59 (illustrated in colour, p. 91). This exhibition later travelled to Valencia, IVAM Centre Julio-Gonzalez and Nantes, Musée des Beaux-Arts.
Paris, Galerie Bellier, Polyptyques et paravents, 1990, p. 54 (illustrated in colour, p. 55).
Warsaw, Muzeum Narodowe, Francja dzisiaj, 1990-1991. This exhibition later travelled to Krakow, Muzeum Narodowe.
Bâle, Galerie Bellier, Art 24'93, 1993.

Literature

P. Daix & J.J. Sweeney, Pierre Soulages: L'oeuvre 1947-1990, Neuchatel 1991, p. 12 (illustrated in colour, p. 13).
P. Encrevé, Pierre Soulages, L'oeuvre complet Peintures 1979-1997, vol. III, Paris 1998, no. 946 (illustrated in colour, p. 185).
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