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This is the rating and price for Impi Ukuthula by Willem Boshoff


Willem Boshoff born in 1951
About the lot N° 93
Impi Ukuthula ,2005
Medium: plastic toys, sand, soil, stones, wood glue, Masonite, wood
Size : height: 72cm, length: 92cm, width: 41cm Price: 3 816.62 USD It's free to register now to view!
Estimate (low-high) : 80000 ZAR-120000 ZAR It's free to register now to view!
Strauss & Co, auctioneer It's free to register now to view!

Sale Title : Modern, Post-War, Contemporary Art Live Virtual Auction It's free to register now to view!
Sale date : 08 Nov 2021 It's free to register now to view!
Sale Reference : Live Sale

Notes : ‘Impi is Zulu for ‘war’ and ukuthula means ‘peace’. The work Impi Ukuthula is inspired by the signs of the street artist Chickenman who worked outside the Tatham Art Gallery in Pietermaritzburg, KwaZulu-Natal. Chickenman has no training in art, can’t read well and paints his signs in ‘outsider’ mode. His text is often surprisingly hyphenated to make it fit the writing surface. The words ‘cattle crossing’ might, for example, be refreshingly truncated as ‘cattle cr-ossing.’ I use this ad hoc style of hyphenation in Impi Ukuthula. The words wrap around corners and are at odds with each other by meeting at right angles. UKUTHULA takes up three faces as UK-UTHU-LA. WAR becomes W-AR and is upside down next to PEACE which reads as PEA-CE. Together they wrap from the left face, across the top and down the right hand face. W-AR accidentally ends in UK and PEA-CE accidentally ends in LA. This dislocation of letters in the war and peace text serves to disorient the reader. We are lost. What is the point of war? Where is the peace? It’s hard to see, a reader’s nightmare with IMPI significantly the only word easy to read. The words are composed of smashedup war toys. They are imbedded on a background of coarse gravel strewn with broken objects. Damaged fighter planes, dismembered soldiers and slaughtered animals litter a devastated landscape. I gathered materials in toy shops and I was disillusioned to find so many aisles devoted to war toys and toy guns, alien wars and police activity. The second most represented category was that of Barbie dolls, make-believe dress and make-up. Peaceful endeavours like building, carpentry, farming and medical care were noticeably under-represented. If guns and the elements of aggression are taken out of the toy shop, it will cease to exist. I feel drawn to reflect on this lack of balance, this approval of conflict and confrontation.’Willem Boshoff

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