Butterflies are recurrent motifs in Charles Blackman’s work. They flutter through his gardens, streets and Wonderland, winking at the idea of transformation. Indeed, butterflies - evolving from lowly caterpillars into flight - are a utopian ideal made real. It is true that our identity is in constant movement, and our hope that it will follow the butterfly.
In this exceptionally rare work, Charles Blackman uses the butterfly to “express the general by the particular… [and make] the particular express the general”. It comes from a series of etchings, perhaps created in preparation for his series ‘Alice’s Book of Butterflies’. Each imagining of the butterfly is different. In the idiosyncrasies of their wings, Blackman finds the dualities of the universe – something can be fragile and adaptable, mundane and magical, real and make-believe.
The butterfly has many symbolic connotations: hope, transformation, purity, life and death. The seventeenth-century Dutch naturalist Jan Swannerdam argued that their life stages were emblematic of life, purgatory and resurrection. In their beauty, is the nascent threat of death. Here, turned into an eternal form, we can contend with this idea before it flutters into the night.
For collectors of Modern art and Blackman collect this butterfly before it flutters away. It is rare and hand-signed by the artist himself, offering a peripheral view into his famed Alice in Wonderland series. We suggest catching a few, there’s only one of each in this menagerie.
Charles BLACKMAN (1928 - 2018)
'Butterfly Cat's Eyes' c. 1985
Etching and aquatint on paper
Image Size: 20 x 25 cm
Dimensions: 56 x 38 cm
Signed: Signed Blackman lower right. Bears Blackman insignia bottom margin.
Comes with a Certificate of Authenticity from the Charles Blackman Foundation.
Condition: Very Good: Image in immaculate condition; minor smudges in top margin. There are no tears to paper margin or disruption to the paint surface.
(c) Charles Blackman / Copyright Agency