Still Life With Vase And Sunflowers ,1940
Herkunft : Provenance: Private collection, Pretoria. Acquired from the artist and thence by descent.
Exhibited :
Literature : Marais, D. (1994). 'Maggie Laubser: her paintings, drawings and graphics'. Johannesburg: Perskor Publishers, illustrated on p.296, catalogue number 1205.
Anmerkung : ABOUT THE ARTWORK On Maggie Laubser’s return from Germany in 1924 after a decade in Europe, she was hailed by many as an avant-garde painter, a South African expressionist and a brave modernist. More conservative critics panned her works as childish, crude and un-naturalistic. Both views were commenting, whether in a positive or negative way, on her bold pictorial style using broad slabs of pigment, dark outlines and simplification of detail; a visual language which was so different from that practiced by the earlier generation of Romantic-realist painters like Edward Roworth, Gwelo Goodman and Jan Volschenk. Within her oeuvre there remains a tension and slight contradiction between this notion of breaking new ground on the one hand, but on the other remaining within the conservative genres of art which were deemed particularly suitable for a woman painter: landscape, portraiture and still lifes. Yet within this traditional genre of still life painting, Laubser’s style was individualistic and expressive. The flowers in her still lifes are always large, bold and striking … no delicate small florets, no highly realistic minute detailing, no plethora of studio objects. So proteas, hibiscus, poinsettias, zinnias, arum lilies and in this work, sunflowers, stand in clunky vases on simple horizontal surfaces against plain backgrounds, depicted with a loose energized brushwork and reduced imitative detail. Here four large blooms with 2 curvilinear organic leaves are represented with an immediacy and directness, close to the picture plane.The disjunction of the table level behind the vase on the left and the right, gives a further energy and tension to the work. Iconographically, the sunflower had a particular significance for Laubser who associated the colour yellow with the sun, with light and on a symbolic level with a positive and optimistic attitude. This can be seen most directly in her naming her house in the Strand, Altyd Lig or Always Light. This work has an excellent provenance having been bought directly from the artist by a Pretoria collector c. 1941. Elizabeth Delmont
Condition_report : The overall condition is good. Minor surface dirt and fly specks in areas.