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This is the rating and price for Self-portrait (Right-hand Side of the Brain) by Willem Boshoff


 Online
Willem Boshoff born in 1951
About the lot N° 313
Self-portrait (Right-hand Side of the Brain) ,2011
Medium: mixed media on board
Size : 101 by 101cm excluding frame, 114 by 114 by 15cm including frame
Signature: signed and dated 2011 on the reverse
Price: 3 631.73 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 : November Online Part II Online-Only Auction It's free to register now to view!
Sale date : 29 Nov 2021 It's free to register now to view!
Sale Reference : Online sale

Provenance : Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg. Private Collection, Johannesburg.
Exhibited : Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, Willem Boshoff/SWAT, 18 August to 24 September 2011.
Notes : This work is an assemblage of alphabet beads, smashed computer plastic, stones, bougainvillea twigs and glue in a meranti frame. ‘I am a Dadaist at heart and I have worked with casting things all my life … I do this in the firm belief that that particular accidental/incidental act will lead me to find a great pearl of wisdom … I give myself only one chance, one stab of the finger at an all-encompassing universal truth. In the early seventies, as a student I learnt about Jean Arp and his experiments with the ‘Laws of Chance’. All my life I have experimented with these. Levi Strauss speaks of the contingency of incidence and co-incidence. Cage speaks of aleatoric (throwing the dice) work when he ventures more into the coincidental and Xenakis uses the term stochasitic (guessing/ aiming) for his rationalising of irrational happenstance. I have devoted my life to live in a stochastic/aleatority manner and I have made rather large installations in which I study how randomly deployed objects and experiences may hold the truth. The correct word for such endeavours is ‘divination’ and the practice of divination is older than any record of human existence. [In my book] ‘What every Druid Should Know’, I devote considerable time to how we might manage to decipher our Hamlet from chicken bones, bird droppings and a monkey playing with a typewriter.’ Willem Boshoff, 2011

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