Pilot bird
Aubusson tapestry woven by the Atelier Legoueix.
With its bolduc Signed by the artist, Numbered 1/6.
1969.
Member of the A.P.C.T. (Association des Peintres-Cartonniers de Tapisserie), Wogensky was one of the many artists who devoted themselves to tapestry following Lurçat, in the immediate post-war period. First influenced by him, Wogensky’s work (159 cartoons after the 1989 exhibition catalogue) then developed in the 1960s toward a lyrical abstraction, not always fully embraced: from cosmic-astronomical themes to decomposed and moving bird forms, toward cartoons that were more refined and less dense. Although he always proclaimed himself a painter, the artist’s reflection on tapestry was highly developed: “Realize a wall cartoon…. it means thinking in relation to a space that no longer belongs to us, because of its dimensions, its scale; it is also the requirement of a broad gesture that transforms and heightens our presence.”
« « Oiseau Pilote » » (« Pilot bird »), in the singular, as the trajectory « chronotissé » in a red azure (cf. « Oiseaux de Midi », or « Envol », from the same year) of a form (a force even!) that guides and directs: so it is to follow…
n°12.








