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Das ist der Preis für die folgende Bewertung: David Goldblatt; South African 1930-2018; On the Bank, President Steyn No.4 Shaft, Welkom. June 1969 nach David Goldblatt


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David Goldblatt (1930-2019)
Über das Lot Chargen- 150
David Goldblatt; South African 1930-2018; On the Bank, President Steyn No.4 Shaft, Welkom. June 1969
Medien: silver gelatin print on fibre-based paper
Größe : image size: 40 by 40cm; 60,5 by 58 by 4,5cm including frame
Ausgabe:
Unterschrift:
Preis: 6 600.00 USD 🔓Keine Kreditkarte nötig.
Schätzung (niedrig/hoch) : 120000 ZAR-160000 ZAR 🔓Keine Kreditkarte nötig.
Strauss & Co, Auktionator 🔓Keine Kreditkarte nötig.

Verkaufstitel : Evening Sale - Session One 🔓Keine Kreditkarte nötig.
Verkaufsdatum : 28/05/2024 🔓Keine Kreditkarte nötig.
Auktionsreferenz : 6B47CZHJMR Online sale

Herkunft :
Exhibited : Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, David Goldblatt/On the Mines/ 2012, 25 October to 21 December 2012.
Literature :
Anmerkung : In 2005, William Kentridge premiered his commissioned production of Mozart's Die Zauberflöte (The Magic Flute) at the Royal Theatre of La Monnaie, an opera house in Brussels. As part of his planning for this large-scale production Kentridge created a miniature theatre in his studio to develop his set design and work out the relationship between the live actors and projected stop-animation films. Kentridge's directorial aid was subsequently exhibited at the Goodman Gallery. The exhibition also included working drawings and fragments used in creating animations for the opera. This drawing, which derives from that exhibition, presents a series of preliminary studies for the intricately layered physical proscenium that Kentridge used to surround the central stage space. The drawings rhythmically repeat motifs (stage curtains, tropical palms) in a dominant chromatic hue of charcoal black. The sober tone is consistent with Kentridge's contemporary reading of Mozart's opera. 'Mozart wrote Die Zauberflöte in 1791, when an optimism and clear belief in the Enlightenment were possible,' Kentridge told an audience at Harvard University in 2012. 'Such an optimism is no longer available. Not just the individual monsters of history but the calamitous history of colonialism, the primary political manifestation of the Enlightenment, are both object lessons we cannot ignore.'1 Kentridge's use of charcoal as a thinking tool for manifesting these thoughts in his stage design points to the remarkable utility of charcoal in Kentridge's creative universe. William Kentridge (2014) Six Drawing Lessons, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press. Page 48 In the mid 1960s, David Goldblatt began to photograph the dying mines he had grown up amongst, in Randfontein, west of Johannesburg on the so-called West Rand. 'One after the other, shafts were being sealed and headgears and magnificent steam hoists oxyacetylened for scrap,' Goldblatt later explained. 'A compound for black miners became a hospital for the insane. I ranged the length of the Witwatersrand, from Randfontein to Springs, photographing the death of a culture.'1 Goldblatt published his earliest photos in Optima magazine, in 1968, together with an accompanying text by writer Nadine Gordimer. While the initial impulse was to record a manmade landscape in the process of being dismantled, Goldblatt was aware that in the goldfields of the far West Rand and the Free State, new mines had opened. In 1969, he began to photograph shaftsinking operations at President Steyn No. 4 Shaft in Welkom. His claustrophobic photographs of men - black and white - working in unison to bore a vertical hole into the earth appeared in Optima that same year. Goldblatt continued to visit this Free State mine into 1970. His debut book, On the Mines (1973), included an expanded section devoted to his action photos of shaftsinking. This informal group portrait of three Free State shaftsinkers captures a rare moment of respite and composure before the start of the gruelling engineering operations, which Goldblatt characterised as 'an act of supreme audacity'.2 As was his manner as a documentary photographer, Goldblatt is attentive here to the circumstances and hierarchies that prevailed in the workplace during apartheid. His portrait records the mandatory white oilers and gumboots worn by the shaftsinkers. A shaftsinking team comprised up to 72 Basotho Machine Men led by two white men, a Sinker and Sinker's Helper. Their designation as shaftsinkers is important. 'Shaftsinkers say that theirs is a man's job, that they could not stand the dull routine of ordinary mining,' writes Goldblatt. 'Miners say that shaftsinkers are mad.'3 1 David Goldblatt (2010) Kith Kin & Khaya, Johannesburg, Goodman Gallery. Page 25. 2 David Goldblatt (1973) On The Mines, Cape Town,C. Struik. Unpaginated. 3 Ibid. Unpaginated.
Condition_report :

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