Yves Gaucher
(1934 - 2000) Les Plasticiens
Previously Sold Works
YVES GAUCHER
Gris et Bleu
acrylic on canvas
signed, titled and dated Nov/Dec 1972 on the reverse
80 x 90 ins ( 203.2 x 228.6 cms )
Auction Estimate: $30,000.00 - $50,000.00
Price Realized $46,000.00
Sale date: May 29th 2014
YVES GAUCHER
Pli selon pli
colour etching, embossed with chine-collé
signed, titled, numbered 6/30 and dated 1964 in the lower margin; unframed
22.5 x 29.75 ins ( 57.2 x 75.6 cms ) ( sheet )
Auction Estimate: $2,500.00 - $3,500.00
Price Realized $2,400.00
Sale date: November 22nd 2022
YVES GAUCHER
Fugue Jaune
relief print on laminated print
signed, titled, dated 1963 and numbered 18/30 in the lower margin; condition noted
22 x 30 ins ( 55.9 x 76.2 cms ) ( sheet )
Auction Estimate: $1,000.00 - $1,500.00
Price Realized $1,416.00
Sale date: July 16th 2019
YVES GAUCHER
Transitions
eight colour lithographs
each lithograph signed and dated 1967 lower right and numbered "I 29/50" lower left, each unframed; housed in the original portfolio case
17.5 x 23 in ( 44.5 x 58.4 cm ) ( each sheet )
Auction Estimate: $1,200.00 - $1,600.00
Price Realized $1,320.00
Sale date: January 28th 2025
YVES GAUCHER
Cardinal Raga
colour screenprint
signed and numbered “H.C.1” in the lower margin. Contemporary hand printed reproduction by Peter Markgraf in the late 1960’s after the original canvas with assistance from the artist; unframed
26 x 25 ins ( 66 x 63.5 cms ) ( sheet )
Auction Estimate: $600.00 - $800.00
Price Realized $660.00
Sale date: September 27th 2022
YVES GAUCHER
Transitions
eight lithographs
each lithograph signed, titled, dated 1967 and numbered 40/60; presented within the original portfolio
17.5 x 23 ins ( 44.5 x 58.4 cms ) ( each lithograph )
Consignments
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Yves Gaucher Biography
(1934 - 2000) Les Plasticiens
Born in Montreal, Quebec, he studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts where he first took a general course but later specialized in print-making (1954-60). Initially a painter he began exploring the possibilities of intaglio print-making. He acquired his own press in 1959 and by 1960 had stopped painting altogether. His work was exhibited at the Paris Biennial, the National Print Competition in Vancouver in 1961 where he won a prize: the Province of Quebec competition (first prize) and by 1963 held his first one man show at Galerie Agnes Left when Ruth Auersperg noted that his work was private rebellion against restrictions of conventional printmaking, a rebellion in which he was not alone. She also found the exhibition showed imagination in having some of the plates displayed along with the prints so that the viewer could see the use of relied and intaglio-engraving, embossing, and overlaying with acrylic paste. She explained how Gaucher had resolved his inking problem by grinding the pigments of his colours and then mixing them himself. By his use of laminated papers of various weights and colours he added a calculated element to his compositions.
He participated in several important international exhibitions in 1963. By 1964 he was exhibiting at the Martha Jackson Gallery, New York where Barbara Rose described his work as “free, boulder like forms . . . and highly-ordered geometric compositions of squares and straight lines, in which the squares are subdued and harmonious yellows or greys” she also noted “Gaucher creates works remarkable for their high level of technical accomplishment, bordering perhaps on virtuosity, which in their expansion of the possibilities of contemporary print-making, are particularly gratifying. One commends especially his experimental attitude toward an art form that, unlike painting and sculpture, has experienced as yet no major twentieth-century revolution.
In late 1964 or early 1965 he returned to painting described by Lisa Balfour as follows, “. . . he now works in a spacious, whitewashed second floor studio on St. Paul Street where he operates a bit like a marksman in a shooting gallery. It’s not that he sprays his paintings. It’s just that he observes their ‘behaviour’ from a considerable distance while behind him burns a battery of six powerful floodlights ‘warming up’ what he calls ‘the cold light of day’ . . . Gaucher begins painting by covering the entire surface of his canvas with a basic background colour – be it black, blue, red, . . . structure becomes ‘inevitable’ because the background colour alone determines what sort of geometrical configurations will ultimately be projected upon it . . . Usually he plots broken lines in such a way that the eye or the imagination are required to complete the composition. And the paintings which result are not meant to cause an immediate reaction. Instead, they should manifest ‘a slow intense life of their own’.”
Gaucher’s work has been shown at Galerie Agnes Lefort, Montreal; Moos Gallery, Toronto; and Martha Jackson Gallery, NYC. One of his relief prints on laminate paper was exhibited in the Canadian Government Pavilion at Expo 67. He is represented in the National Gallery of Canada, the Art Gallery of Ontario, the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts and the Museum of Modern Art, NYC. He lived in Montreal.
Source: "A Dictionary of Canadian Artists, Volume II”, compiled by Colin S. MacDonald, Canadian Paperbacks Publishing Ltd, Ottawa, 1979