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

This is the rating and price for ABSTRACT TORSO by Edoardo Villa


 Online
Edoardo Villa (1915-2011)
About the lot N° 25
ABSTRACT TORSO
Medium:
Size : including base: 98 x 55 x 38 cm; excluding base: 123.5 x 55 x 50 cm
Edition:
Signature:
Price: 14 389.32 USD It's free to register now to view!
Estimate (low-high) : 240000 ZAR-280000 ZAR It's free to register now to view!
Aspire Art Auctions, auctioneer It's free to register now to view!

Sale Title : 20th Century & Contemporary Art Live Auction It's free to register now to view!
Sale date : 07 Jun 2023 It's free to register now to view!
Sale Reference : E5BUI0GTMG Online sale

Provenance : Provenance: Private collection, Johannesburg.
Exhibited :
Literature :
Notes : ABOUT THE ARTWORK Edoardo Villa is today one of the most celebrated modernist South African sculptors, particularly renowed for his large-scale public steel works. What is often lesser known is his experimentation and exploration in mediums other than bronze and steel, such as terrazzo. During his sculpture studies in Italy, Villa was conscripted into the army as World War II started. In 1942, Villa was brought to South Africa as a prisoner of war in the Zonderwater camp. Shortly after being cleared at the camp in 1947, he searched in Johannesburg for a new home. Villa first lived in Joubert Park, after which he moved to a rondavel on the property of well-known Italian contractors the Lupini Brothers’ terrazzo factory in Wynberg. Terrazzo is a composite material, either precast or poured, which consists of a mixture of material chips such as granite, quartz, glass and marble to which a binder such as cement or epoxy is added. It is at this factory that Villa acquired his knowledge and skillsets for art precasting. Gerard De Kamper, Museum Collections Curator at the University of Pretoria, notes that Edoardo Villa’s solo exhibition at Galerie Vincente, Pretoria in 1951 is the only exhibition in which Villa had exhibited works similar to Abstract torso, both in terrazzo and the abstracted smooth forms of the sculptures.[1] Villa was, at this time, fascinated with the human form and abstraction. South African art historian Esmé Berman describes this fascination by writing that “[m]an and his condition have been the central inspiration of Villa’s oeuvre throughout his career… the varied images and altering emphases eventuating from a lifetime’s preoccupation with a single theme”.[2] It was only later in the early 1950s, that Villa started experimenting with welding metal together. After that his sculptures would still look at abstraction and human form but in sharper and larger iterations that are reflective of dealing with steel and welding. The knowledge and skillsets developed at the Lupini brothers’ factory did not only add to Villa’s artistic practice, but also allowed him to generate income through commissions. He was commissioned by the architect Sidney Abramowitch, through the Abramowitch, David Pinshow & Schneider architectural firm, to create three terrazzo panel sets depicting the 12 Tribes of Israel for this Shull in The Orchards suburb in Johannesburg. Abramowitch was part of many large architectural projects in Johannesburg, notably the Innes Chambers Law buildings and the Apartheid Museum. In an email conversation with Sidney Abramowitch’s daughter, Diane Smullen, she recounts that this artwork, Abstract torso, was gifted by Villa to the late architect Abramowitch to thank him for the commission which would give Villa the exposure that he needed and that they remained firm friends until Villa’s passing in 2011. [3] Carina Jansen [1] De Kamper, G. (2023). Text conversation with Carina Jansen, 15 May. [2] Engel, E. P. (ed). (2008). Edoardo Villa: Sculpture. Johannesburg: United Book Distributors, p.17. [3] Smullen, D. (2023). Email conversation with Carina Jansen, 22 May. Edoardo Villa standing at his solo exhibition at Galerie Vincente, Pretoria, 1951. Terrazo panels depicting the 12 tribes of Israel made by Edoardo Villa at the Shull in The Orchards, Johannesburg.
Condition_report : The overall condition is very good. Minor surface especially towards the crevasses. Minor cracking in areas. Upper left area has minor cement patchwork for restoration.

Interested in valuating work by this artist ? 

AfricartMarket Insights

Access exclusive information.Sign-up here for our newsletter and we’ll keep you updated. You can unsubscribe at any time.

 

We respect your privacy. No spam.