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Consulter la cote et le prix de Deborah Margaret Bell (South African, Born 1957) World'S Body par Deborah Bell


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Deborah Bell né en 1957
À propos du lot n° 31
Deborah Margaret Bell (South African, Born 1957) World'S Body
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Estimations(basse-haute) : 10000 GBP-15000 GBP 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
Bonhams, Salle de vente 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
,Lieu de la vente : London, LDN, UK
Titre de la vente : Modern & Contemporary African Art 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
Date de la vente : 19/03/2026 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
Référence de l'enchère : 08FM83SRXN Online sale

Provenance : [Propriété non datée] - A private collection - Exhibited Museum of Modern Art, Oxford in association with the Zabalaza Festival in London, Art from South Africa (June-September 1990) London, Atkinson Gallery, Millfield School, Cross Cross Currents: Contemporary Art practice in South Africa, (September 2000) Literature David Elliot, art from South Arica, Museum of Oxford, Exhibition catalogue (Oxford: Museum of Modern Art, Oxford and Thames & Hudson, 1990), p. 46 - (illustrated) John Picton and Jennifer Law, Cross Cross Currents: Contemporary Art practice in South Africa, (Somerset: Atkinson Gallery, 2000), p. 63 - (illustrated) - Extracted from Deborah Bell's Desert/Expulsion series that spanned between 1989-1991, World's Body holds stark similarities to World on Fire whilst taking a dominant position in the artists oeuvre - The work depicts a strong stoic female figure making eye contact with the viewer - The male figure is turned away, gazing at the landscape and either rising or setting sun - Pippa Stein says of the compositional choice in World on Fire that the two figures 'are in a point-counterpoint relationship: connected, yet apart, opposite yet the same; one dark, one light; looking forward, looking back; animus, anima.' The present work holds a very similar dichotomy; the woman is the dominant figure in the eyes of Bell and for the viewers gaze - The figures stand separately, the woman empowered in her stoisicsm: I used to stand in the pose of the woman I was painting, and consciously feel what it was like to be that leg, that arm, the particular expression of the face - She was I and not I - She is no longer caught off balance, in impossible high-heeled shoes or twisted into compromised positions - In these paintings, there was a change in embodiment, a new sense of resolve and inner strength, of 'standing solidly on the earth', bare feet rooted to the ground - The woman looks out of these paintings, holding the viewer in gaze, while the man is usually turned away - It was as if in painting her, I was saying, 'Here I am', an yet once I became the observer of the final painting, she stood there quite separate and self-contained and we looked at each other - (p.18) Born in Johannesburg in 1957, Deborah Bell is a leading South African painter, sculptor and printmaker who received her Masters degree in Fine Art at the University of the Witwatersrand - Bell has collaborated with Robert Hodgins and William Kentridge on numerous projects such as Hogarth in Johannesburg (1987-8), Memo (1994) and UBU 101 (1997)
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