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This is the rating and price for Stanley Pinker; South African 1924-2012; His and Hers and Decline and Fall, diptych by Stanley Pinker


 Online
Stanley Pinker (1924-2012)
About the lot N° 35
Stanley Pinker; South African 1924-2012; His and Hers and Decline and Fall, diptych ,1991
Medium: acrylic on canvas
Size : each 92,5 by 70,5cm 103,5 by 157,7 by 4,5cm including frame
Edition:
Signature:
Estimate (low-high) : 1600000 ZAR-2000000 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 : Portway to Cohen: A Collector’s Legacy and Other Properties - Session One It's free to register now to view!
Sale date : 21 Feb 2026 It's free to register now to view!
Sale Reference : R7FH4508UY Online sale

Provenance : Die Kunskamer, Cape Town, 1993. Private Collection.
Exhibited : Strauss & Co, Welgemeend August Art Month: Satire & Irony, 2019.
Literature : Michael Stevenson (ed) (2001) Michael Stevenson (ed) (2001) Works From A Private Collection of Contemporary South African Art on Permanent Loan to The Chancellor Oppenheimer Library, University of Cape Town, Cape Town: University of Cape Town, illustrated in black and white, unpaginated, cat. no. 34. Michael Stevenson (ed) (2004) Stanley Pinker, Cape Town: Michael Stevenson, illustrated in colour on page 80. Strauss & Co (2019) Welgemeend August Art Month: Satire & Irony, Cape Town: Strauss & Co, illustrated in colour on page 37.
Notes : "Pinker spent a decade living, studying and working in Europe between 1954 and 1964. In his intelligent translation of the formal conventions of modern art movements, especially Cubism, he explores the follies, pretensions and evils of colonial and post-colonial white society in South Africa. In this painting, which exemplifies Pinker's later work, the idea that this society is capable of transformation is gently mocked by the exercise machines that promise a new body, but not necessarily a new or changed mind. The fresh colour and decorative flatness of the work competes with a savage dryness of line and fractured quality in the figurative elements. This results in a work where emotional and conceptual complexity is woven into a composition of exceptional formal elegance."1 1. Michael Stevenson (ed) (2001) Michael Stevenson (ed) (2001) Works From A Private Collection of Contemporary South African Art on Permanent Loan to The Chancellor Oppenheimer Library, University of Cape Town, Cape Town: University of Cape Town, unpaginated.
Condition_report :

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