Site Loader
Rock Street, San Francisco
  • Current Language:
  • fr
  • Select Language:

Das ist der Preis für die folgende Bewertung: George Milwa Mnyaluza Pemba; South African 1912-2001; Clean Up nach George Pemba


 Online
George Pemba (1912-2001)
Über das Lot Chargen- 125
George Milwa Mnyaluza Pemba; South African 1912-2001; Clean Up
Medien: oil on canvas laid down on board
Größe : 38 by 48cm excluding frame 64,5 by 74,5 by 3cm including frame
Ausgabe:
Unterschrift:
Preis: 23 100.00 USD 🔓Keine Kreditkarte nötig.
Schätzung (niedrig/hoch) : 400000 ZAR-600000 ZAR 🔓Keine Kreditkarte nötig.
Strauss & Co, Auktionator 🔓Keine Kreditkarte nötig.
,erkaufsort : Cape Town, Western Cape, ZA
Verkaufstitel : Perspectives on Africa - Session One 🔓Keine Kreditkarte nötig.
Verkaufsdatum : 17/02/2025 🔓Keine Kreditkarte nötig.
Auktionsreferenz : EHNL2VDTZF Online sale

Herkunft : Acquired from the artist by Hans J Weber, Port Elizabeth. Everard Read, Johannesburg, 1991. Private Collection.
Exhibited : Everard Read, Johannesburg, George Mnyaluza Milwa Pemba, 1991, illustrated in colour in the exhibition catalogue on page 3. Goodman Gallery, London, Mapping Another Route - South African Artists in a Modern Era, 2 to 26 September 2023.
Literature : Sarah Huddleston (1990) Against All Odds: George Pemba, His Life and Works, Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball Publishers, illustrated in colour on page 116. Hayden Proud and Barry Feinberg (ed) (1996) George Milwa Mnyaluza Pemba: Exhibition, Cape Town, South African National Gallery, 27.4.-28.7.1996, Cape Town: South African National Gallery, exhibition catalogue, cat. no. 103.
Anmerkung : The present lot was first exhibited in June 1991 by Everard Read, Johannesburg. Jaqueline Nolte argues that this show brought 'Pemba to the attention of an art public.'1 The exhibition resulted from art dealer Hans J Weber visiting George Pemba in Port Elizabeth and purchasing 178 works, which he sold through Everard Read. This important exhibition created attention around Pemba, elevating his career and artistic recognition after significant racial divides had hindered it.2 Pemba painted Clean Up in the wake of the Sharpeville massacre of 1960 when '[t]he effects of apartheid on South African society were becoming evident.'3 Pemba, although not actively involved in political protests, had become increasingly frustrated by 'pass laws' and enraged by injustices. He would have closely followed the events leading up to and during the Sharpeville massacre. Clean Up is emblematic of this event and, through the artist's visual narration, sets the scene by placing a shadowed white soldier in the defeated pose, offset against a spirited and colourful display of township defiance. Pemba's message conveyed through the title speaks poignantly to the tragic wreckage left by a morally indefensible ideology. During the fifties and sixties leading up to the time the present lot was painted, Pemba had become somewhat frustrated with his career progression. Sarah Huddleston notes, 'while some art critics would argue that his work was easily on par with Gerard Sekoto, he never received the same degree of recognition.'4 He became increasingly eager to grow his career by travelling overseas and joining his friends Ernest Mancoba and Gerard Sekoto in Paris to 'broaden his horizons and experience,'5 he noted earnestly in an interview with the Weekend Post in 1953. Although, in the end, he chose to stay home due to family commitments, like his peers, Pemba was hugely influenced by impressionist and expressionist movements from Europe, like his peers. His work became increasingly expressive and referenced the likes of Renoir, Monet, Degas and Van Gogh as an inspiration.6 Clean Up is an important painting from this period. 1. Jacqueline Nolte (1996) 'Sources and Style in the Oil Paintings of George Milwa Mnyaluza Pemba', in Hayden Proud and Barry Feinberg (eds), George Milwa Mnyaluza Pemba: Exhibition, Cape Town, South African National Gallery, 27.4.-28.7.1996, Cape Town: South African National Gallery, exhibition catalogue, page 34. 2. Ibid. 3. Sarah Hudleston (1996) Against All Odds: George Pemba: His Life and Works, Johannesburg: Jonathan Ball Publishers, page 51. 4. Ibid. 5. Ibid. 6. Jacqueline Nolte (1996) 'Sources and Style in the Oil Paintings of George Milwa Mnyaluza Pemba' in Hayden Proud and Barry Feinberg (eds), George Milwa Mnyaluza Pemba: Exhibition, Cape Town, South African National Gallery, 27.4.-28.7.1996, Cape Town: South African National Gallery, exhibition catalogue, page 35.
Condition_report :

Sind Sie daran interessiert, Kunst von diesem Künstler oder dieser Künstlerin zu begutachten? 

AfricartMarket Insights

Greifen Sie auf exklusive Informationen zu.Abonnieren Sie jetzt unseren Newsletter und entdecken Sie alle Neuheiten und unwiderstehliche Angebote.

Wir respektieren Ihre Privatsphäre. Kein Spam.