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Consulter la cote et le prix de Alexis Preller; South African 1911-1975; Archangel par Alexis Preller


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Alexis Preller (1911-1975)
À propos du lot n° 917
Alexis Preller; South African 1911-1975; Archangel
Medium: oil on canvas
Dimensions : 70 by 60cm excluding frame; 74,5 by 64 by 3,5cm including frame
Édition:
Signature:
Estimations(basse-haute) : 1500000 ZAR-2000000 ZAR 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
Strauss & Co, Salle de vente 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.

Titre de la vente : Session Eight: Modern, Post-War and Contemporary Art Part II 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
Date de la vente : 11/11/2020 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
Référence de l'enchère : KENREUR48Z Online sale

Provenance :
Exhibited : Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, 12 to 29 November 1975, catalogue number 15.
Literature : Alexis Preller's Archangel was bought by the current owner from the artist's last exhibition during his lifetime, at the Goodman Gallery in 1975. The visitor asked the artist which work he should buy and Preller pointed unhesitatingly to Archangel. The exhibition was a triumph, but Preller unfortunately had little time to bask in the success as he died a few weeks later while undergoing surgery. The present lot was completed in that year, but it reworks themes and concerns begun many years earlier, as was typical of Preller's practice. The composition reproduces the idea of the disembodied, isolated head first developed in the Urn and African head paintings of the 1940s, but here continues, specifically, the series of 'Angel' heads that depicts imaginary mythological god-kings (and king-gods) familiar from Angel King (1971) and Space Angel (1971), among others. Preller was a keen student of traditional African sculpture, and the outlined almond eyes, full lips and scarified cheeks in the present lot are reminiscent of Yoruba Ibeji figures from Nigeria, with which he was familiar. The ritual pharaonic beard has its origins further north, in Egypt, where it was a marker of kingly power and divine authority, and the residual spiked helmet (visible also as worn by the band of warriors in the All Africa mural of 1953-55) derives from an imaginary archaic culture, whether African or Mediterranean. The work has an unusually monochromatic colour palette for Preller - none of the iridescent turquoises and luscious coral tones so characteristic of his work in the 1960s - and perhaps it speaks of a more sombre, introspective moment in the artist's life, when, weak from an energy-sapping illness, he depicts a spectral angel, a shadow of its earlier vivid manifestations.
Notes : This lot is being sold to support a Cape Town Theatre struggling to survive in the current situation.
Condition_report :

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