Join The Collection to save, track, and explore works like this.

M. C. Escher — Print Gallery (b./k./l./w. 410)
M. C. Escher

Print Gallery (b./k./l./w. 410)

A young man stands in a print gallery, gazing at a coastal townscape displayed on the wall, which gradually expands and curves back upon itself to encompass the very gallery in which he stands. Escher masterfully employs a impossible spiral grid distortion that causes the image to loop infinitely, blurring the boundaries between the artwork, the viewer, and reality itself. This celebrated lithograph stands as one of Escher's most complex explorations of self-reference and recursive space, leaving a enigmatic blank circle at its center where the mathematical transformation breaks down.

Medium
PRINT GALLERY (B./K./L./W. 410)
Location
Sotheby's, New York, NY

🔨 Auction Lot

Prints & Multiples Day Sale

April 30, 2019

Estimate: $18,000 to $24,000

Lot 96

Start the Discussion

Request access to join the discussion

Artists in conversation

René Magritte

Belgian · b. 1898

Magritte similarly constructed self-referential painted realities where images contain themselves recursively, such as paintings depicting easels showing the very scene behind them, creating the same impossible loop between observer and observed that defines this Escher lithograph.

Hendrik Werkman

Dutch · b. 1882

As a fellow Dutch printmaker working in monochrome geometric compositions, Werkman explored spatial distortion and typographic grid structures in his lithographic works that share the mathematical underpinning and flat tonal draftsmanship visible in this recursive townscape print.

Jos de Mey

Belgian · b. 1928

De Mey created precisely rendered architectural impossible worlds in which structures loop back upon themselves and defy spatial logic, directly echoing the recursive spiral grid distortion and self-containing infinite space that Escher achieves in this print.

About this work

M. C. Escher, Print Gallery (b./k./l./w. 410)

A young man stands in a print gallery, gazing at a coastal townscape displayed on the wall, which gradually expands and curves back upon itself to encompass the very gallery in which he stands. Escher masterfully employs a impossible spiral grid distortion that causes the image to loop infinitely, blurring the boundaries between the artwork, the viewer, and reality itself. This celebrated lithograph stands as one of Escher's most complex explorations of self-reference and recursive space, leaving a enigmatic blank circle at its center where the mathematical transformation breaks down.

Medium
PRINT GALLERY (B./K./L./W. 410)
Seen at
Sotheby's, New York, London, Hong Kong, Paris

Related themes

Geometric, Monochrome, Surreal, Dutch, Optical Illusion, Modern, Mathematical, Lithograph, Abstract, Contemporary

More works by M. C. Escher

Similar artists

René Magritte, Hendrik Werkman, Jos de Mey