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58
Tony Cragg
Chain of Events, 2007.
PlyWood
Estimation: € 200,000 / $ 232,000
Tony Cragg
1949
Chain of Events. 2007.
PlyWood.
Unique object. Height: 278 cm (109.4 in). Plinth: 95 x 95 cm (37,4 x 37,4 in).
• The beautiful, monumental sculpture offers ever-changing impressions from every angle.
• In a multitude of wood layers, natural material, organic form, artistic design, skilled craftsmanship, space, and the viewer's perspective combine to create an impressive, holistic sculptural concept.
• Tony Cragg is one of the most successful contemporary sculptors.
• His sculptures are on display in public spaces around the world, such as in the plaza of One Bangkok. They are also part of major museum collections, including the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, the Tate Gallery, London, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.
PROVENANCE: Marian Goodman Gallery, New York.
Private collection, Miami.
Private collection (acquired in 2017)
Opera Gallery, Paris.
Private collection, southern Germany.
"At the point at which Einstein said there is no such thing as matter, he didn’t talk about the particles of things, he talked about things being a chain of events…"
Tony Cragg, quoted from: https://imma.ie/collection/untitled-69/.
Called up: December 5, 2025 - ca. 18.54 h +/- 20 min.
1949
Chain of Events. 2007.
PlyWood.
Unique object. Height: 278 cm (109.4 in). Plinth: 95 x 95 cm (37,4 x 37,4 in).
• The beautiful, monumental sculpture offers ever-changing impressions from every angle.
• In a multitude of wood layers, natural material, organic form, artistic design, skilled craftsmanship, space, and the viewer's perspective combine to create an impressive, holistic sculptural concept.
• Tony Cragg is one of the most successful contemporary sculptors.
• His sculptures are on display in public spaces around the world, such as in the plaza of One Bangkok. They are also part of major museum collections, including the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, the Tate Gallery, London, and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.
PROVENANCE: Marian Goodman Gallery, New York.
Private collection, Miami.
Private collection (acquired in 2017)
Opera Gallery, Paris.
Private collection, southern Germany.
"At the point at which Einstein said there is no such thing as matter, he didn’t talk about the particles of things, he talked about things being a chain of events…"
Tony Cragg, quoted from: https://imma.ie/collection/untitled-69/.
Called up: December 5, 2025 - ca. 18.54 h +/- 20 min.
From the beginning of his career, exploring the material world and its almost infinite artistic potential has been central to Tony Cragg's work. His creations result from a nearly obsessive examination of the material itself. “There is nothing but material,” says Cragg [quoted from: Westdeutsche Zeitung online, April 3, 2019] and describes himself as a “radical materialist” [quoted from: Thaddaeus Ropac, https://ropac.net/news/563-tony-cragg/]. In the course of a five-decade career, he has used a wide variety of materials, most of them man-made, including plastic, fiberglass, plaster, stainless steel, as well as consumer goods, but also bronze, granite, wood, and, as in the monumental work "Chain of Events" offered here, plywood."The reason I am so interested in plywood is that it’s a man-made material. Man-made materials are always inferior, so I try to give them another value, another quality." (https://artflyer.net/tony-cragg/)
Through an intensive examination of materials—quality, surface texture, and shape— a quest for the perfect shape, the artist reveals his background in natural science and his interest in chemistry, physics, genetics, and engineering. He worked as a chemical laboratory technician for two years before studying art. Accordingly, nature remains the most important source of inspiration for his distinctive structures, especially the relationship and interplay between man and nature.
In the 1990s, his sculptures grew to monumental proportions, taking up more space. The artist began creating slender, column-like sculptures that reach for the sky, works that rank among his most sought-after pieces. Like the work offered here, “Chain of Events,” they resemble amorphous abstract forms that evoke organic growth, proliferating mushrooms, or backbones. Yet, they have a particular notion of concreteness that allows for a wide range of associations.
Many stacked, smoothly polished layers of wood in different colors are arranged to create curves, arches, and bulges, with the two intertwining structures rising like a climbing plant to form a perfect symbiosis of form and material. The result is a dynamic structure that defies the law of statics and balance, seemingly losing all sense of gravity and contradicting the laws of physics. The work evokes a sense of movement and inherent vitality, underscored by the title “Chain of Events” and the possible reference to evolution as a constant change and a successive 'chain of events'.
British-born artist Tony Cragg, who has lived in Germany since 1977, has left his mark on international contemporary sculpture since the 1980s. He exhibited at Documenta 7 and 8 in Kassel in 1982 and 1987, respectively, and represented the United Kingdom at the Venice Biennale in 1988, the same year he won the prestigious Turner Prize.
His passion for the material was the subject of last year's much-discussed exhibition “Tony Cragg. Please Touch!” at the Kunstpalast in Düsseldorf, in which visitors were encouraged to touch the fascinating works. Other significant exhibitions have recently been shown at, among others, the Musée du Louvre and the Centre George Pompidou in Paris, the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid, the Royal Academy of Arts in London, the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Humlebæk, the Belvedere in Vienna, the Kunsthalle Bern, and the Benaki Museum in Athens. [CH]
Through an intensive examination of materials—quality, surface texture, and shape— a quest for the perfect shape, the artist reveals his background in natural science and his interest in chemistry, physics, genetics, and engineering. He worked as a chemical laboratory technician for two years before studying art. Accordingly, nature remains the most important source of inspiration for his distinctive structures, especially the relationship and interplay between man and nature.
In the 1990s, his sculptures grew to monumental proportions, taking up more space. The artist began creating slender, column-like sculptures that reach for the sky, works that rank among his most sought-after pieces. Like the work offered here, “Chain of Events,” they resemble amorphous abstract forms that evoke organic growth, proliferating mushrooms, or backbones. Yet, they have a particular notion of concreteness that allows for a wide range of associations.
Many stacked, smoothly polished layers of wood in different colors are arranged to create curves, arches, and bulges, with the two intertwining structures rising like a climbing plant to form a perfect symbiosis of form and material. The result is a dynamic structure that defies the law of statics and balance, seemingly losing all sense of gravity and contradicting the laws of physics. The work evokes a sense of movement and inherent vitality, underscored by the title “Chain of Events” and the possible reference to evolution as a constant change and a successive 'chain of events'.
British-born artist Tony Cragg, who has lived in Germany since 1977, has left his mark on international contemporary sculpture since the 1980s. He exhibited at Documenta 7 and 8 in Kassel in 1982 and 1987, respectively, and represented the United Kingdom at the Venice Biennale in 1988, the same year he won the prestigious Turner Prize.
His passion for the material was the subject of last year's much-discussed exhibition “Tony Cragg. Please Touch!” at the Kunstpalast in Düsseldorf, in which visitors were encouraged to touch the fascinating works. Other significant exhibitions have recently been shown at, among others, the Musée du Louvre and the Centre George Pompidou in Paris, the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in Madrid, the Royal Academy of Arts in London, the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Humlebæk, the Belvedere in Vienna, the Kunsthalle Bern, and the Benaki Museum in Athens. [CH]
58
Tony Cragg
Chain of Events, 2007.
PlyWood
Estimation: € 200,000 / $ 232,000
Commission, taxes et droit de suite
Cet objet est offert avec imposition régulière ou avec imposition différentielle.
Calcul en cas d'imposition différentielle:
Prix d’adjudication jusqu’à 1 000 000 euros : frais de vente 34 %.
Des frais de vente de 29% sont facturés sur la partie du prix d’adjudication dépassant 1 000 000 euros. Ils sont additionnés aux frais de vente dus pour la partie du prix d’adjudication allant jusqu’à 1 000 000 euros.
Des frais de vente de 22% sont facturés sur la partie du prix d’adjudication dépassant 4 000 000 euros. Ils sont additionnés aux frais de vente dus pour la partie du prix d’adjudication allant jusqu’à 4 000 000 euros.
La commission comprend la TVA, mais celle-ci n'est pas indiquée.
Calcul en cas d'imposition régulière:
Prix d'adjudication jusqu'à 1 000 000 € : 29 % de commission.
Prix d'adjudication supérieur à 1 000 000 € : montants partiels jusqu'à 1 000 000 € 29 % de commission, montants partiels supérieurs à 1 000 000 € : 23 % de commission.
Prix d'adjudication supérieur à 4.000 000 € : montants partiels supérieurs à 4.000 000 € : 15 % de commission.
La TVA légale de 7 % est prélevée sur la somme du prix d'adjudication et de la commission.
Si vous souhaitez appliquer l'imposition régulière, merci de bien vouloir le communiquer par écrit avant la facturation.
Calcul en cas de droit de suite:
Pour les œuvres originales d’arts plastiques et de photographie d’artistes vivants ou d’artistes décédés il y a moins de 70 ans, soumises au droit de suite, une rémunération au titre du droit de suite à hauteur des pourcentages indiqués au § 26, al. 2 de la loi allemande sur les droits d’auteur (UrhG) est facturée en sus pour compenser la rémunération liée au droit de suite due par le commissaire-priseur conformément au § 26 UrhG. À ce jour, elle est calculée comme suit :
4 pour cent pour la part du produit de la vente à partir de 400,00 euros et jusqu’à 50 000 euros,
3 pour cent supplémentaires pour la part du produit de la vente entre 50 000,01 et 200 000 euros,
1 pour cent supplémentaire pour la part entre 200 000,01 et 350 000 euros,
0,5 pour cent supplémentaire pour la part entre 350 000,01 et 500 000 euros et
0,25 pour cent supplémentaire pour la part au-delà de 500 000 euros.
Le total de la rémunération au titre du droit de suite pour une revente s’élève au maximum à 12 500 euros.
Calcul en cas d'imposition différentielle:
Prix d’adjudication jusqu’à 1 000 000 euros : frais de vente 34 %.
Des frais de vente de 29% sont facturés sur la partie du prix d’adjudication dépassant 1 000 000 euros. Ils sont additionnés aux frais de vente dus pour la partie du prix d’adjudication allant jusqu’à 1 000 000 euros.
Des frais de vente de 22% sont facturés sur la partie du prix d’adjudication dépassant 4 000 000 euros. Ils sont additionnés aux frais de vente dus pour la partie du prix d’adjudication allant jusqu’à 4 000 000 euros.
La commission comprend la TVA, mais celle-ci n'est pas indiquée.
Calcul en cas d'imposition régulière:
Prix d'adjudication jusqu'à 1 000 000 € : 29 % de commission.
Prix d'adjudication supérieur à 1 000 000 € : montants partiels jusqu'à 1 000 000 € 29 % de commission, montants partiels supérieurs à 1 000 000 € : 23 % de commission.
Prix d'adjudication supérieur à 4.000 000 € : montants partiels supérieurs à 4.000 000 € : 15 % de commission.
La TVA légale de 7 % est prélevée sur la somme du prix d'adjudication et de la commission.
Si vous souhaitez appliquer l'imposition régulière, merci de bien vouloir le communiquer par écrit avant la facturation.
Calcul en cas de droit de suite:
Pour les œuvres originales d’arts plastiques et de photographie d’artistes vivants ou d’artistes décédés il y a moins de 70 ans, soumises au droit de suite, une rémunération au titre du droit de suite à hauteur des pourcentages indiqués au § 26, al. 2 de la loi allemande sur les droits d’auteur (UrhG) est facturée en sus pour compenser la rémunération liée au droit de suite due par le commissaire-priseur conformément au § 26 UrhG. À ce jour, elle est calculée comme suit :
4 pour cent pour la part du produit de la vente à partir de 400,00 euros et jusqu’à 50 000 euros,
3 pour cent supplémentaires pour la part du produit de la vente entre 50 000,01 et 200 000 euros,
1 pour cent supplémentaire pour la part entre 200 000,01 et 350 000 euros,
0,5 pour cent supplémentaire pour la part entre 350 000,01 et 500 000 euros et
0,25 pour cent supplémentaire pour la part au-delà de 500 000 euros.
Le total de la rémunération au titre du droit de suite pour une revente s’élève au maximum à 12 500 euros.



Lot 58 