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This is the rating and price for Deborah Bell; South African 1957-; Witness: Midbrain by Deborah Bell


 Online
Deborah Bell born in 1957
About the lot N° 372
Deborah Bell; South African 1957-; Witness: Midbrain ,2014
Medium: mixed media on canvas
Size : 138 by 99cm excluding frame 149 by 110 by 4cm including frame
Edition:
Signature:
Price: 12 100.00 USD It's free to register now to view!
Estimate (low-high) : 200000 ZAR-300000 ZAR It's free to register now to view!
Strauss & Co, auctioneer It's free to register now to view!
,Sale location : Cape Town, Western Cape, ZA
Sale Title : Evening Sale - Session One It's free to register now to view!
Sale date : 16 Sep 2025 It's free to register now to view!
Sale Reference : 5DS7D8RZ6K Online sale

Provenance : Everard Read, Cape Town, 14 July 2015. The Oliver Powell and Timely Investments Trust Collection.
Exhibited : Everard Read, Deborah Bell: Dreams of Immortality, 7 May to 27 June 2015, Johannesburg and 14 May to 7 June, Cape Town, illustrated in the exhibition catalogue on page 61.
Literature :
Notes : In 1991, Deborah Bell made an etching inspired by Las Meninas, a 1656 painting by Diego Velázquez of the 5-year-old Spanish Infanta, Margaret Theresa. She titled it We Will Never Know What We Are and hung it in her guest bathroom. In the early 2010s, William Kentridge saw the work and encouraged her to revisit the theme. Shortly after, she found herself at the Picasso Museum in Spain in front of Picasso's own renditions on the original. Bell made several quick sketches in her notebook and, upon reviewing them, noticed that in one she had turned the figure in the doorway into one with wings. She embraced this new imagery and began creating works with the 1991 etching as a source. One such work was a dry point etching, Reveal (2014), which served as the precursor to the present lot. Bell explains that she sees the spaces in these works as "…the space of the brain… the paintings on the walls can be seen as memories, both cultural or personal…looking at the past, at something known or accomplished, or they can stand for a new idea, or a reworking for change."1 1. Deborah Bell (2015) Deborah Bell: Dreams of Immortality, Johannesburg: Everard Read, page 52.
Condition_report :

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