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Pocket Money to Millions & students keen eye for art admirably rewarded
20 Oct 2013
A seminal work, Untitled 1985/6, by the eminent South African sculptor, Jane Alexander, will be sold by Strauss & Co in Johannesburg on 11 November 2013 and is expected to fetch over R2million.
Undoubtedly one of the most influential South African sculptors of the 20th/21st Century, Jane Alexander produced Untitled concurrently with her seminal work, Butcher Boys, first exhibited together as part of her WITS master’s show at the Market Gallery in Johannesburg in 1986. In the original installation, Alexander positioned the Butcher Boys upon a bench in a relationship to the Untitled figure, facing them, gazing in the opposite direction, presumably regarding them. Completed in 1986, the year in which South Africa was in its second consecutive state of emergency, one senses the context of their creation beset with violence. There is a feeling in these works of the political and social character of 1980s South Africa.
Untitled, a burly figure seated in a wooden armchair, is strong and intimidating. His cadaveric flesh is daubed with discolorations. At the rear, his skin is severed to expose the brain and spinal column. Draped over his neck is a leather and rubber strap – originally used in the Witwatersrand mines to secure a body to a stretcher to hoist from a shaft. Deprived of a mouth, the figure can merely bear witness to the events in his view, unable to comment, protest, or condone. His eyes do not return one’s gaze but seem to drift off in view of something further, beyond his immediate reach. The imposing form is made all the more disturbing by the fact that it is life sized and rendered in scabrous realism, as though he may at any moment stand up out of his chair. Describing the Butcher Boys, though equally pertinent to Untitled, Emma Bedford, writing at the time as curator for the South African National Gallery elaborates these figures: “In form and content they express the artist’s awareness that the atrocities which humans commit are inscribed on their bodies.”
Notoriously reluctant to interview or discuss the theoretical undercurrents in her work, Alexander commented at the time of her master’s exhibition: “My themes are drawn from the relationships of individuals to hierarchies and the presence of aggression, violence, victimisation, power and subservience…”
Enduringly averse to engage directly with the art market, a characteristic distinctly contrasting to her British and American contemporaries (consider the blatant efforts made in this regard by famous yBAs et al.), Alexander, who has never had formal gallery representation, seems to prefer the setting of less commercial and more austere platforms – kunsthalles, museums, cathedrals etc.
Untitled was purchased after Alexander’s master’s exhibition by the current owner, then a WITS undergraduate student who could only afford to pay off the work in instalments from a sole income of pocket money. It took a year of instalments to complete payment. For a long time the only work sold from Alexander’s graduation show was a small bird sculpture entitled Goose. Untitled was purchased soon thereafter, while the Butcher Boys remained in storage at the artist’s parent’s house, narrowly avoiding the threat of destruction, until they were acquired by the South African National Gallery in 1991. So central have these sculptures since become in the psyches of subsequent generations of South Africans that the constant demand to see them necessitates their being on permanent display in the South African National Gallery. They are probably also South Africa’s greatest visual art ambassadors having been included in many major international exhibitions such as Identita e Alterita at the Venice Biennale in 1995; The Short Century: Independence and Liberation Movements in Africa 1945–1994, curated by Okwui Enwezor for Museum Villa Stuck, Munich, Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, and P.S.1 and the Museum of Modern Art, New York from 2001–2002.
Media enquiries
Bina Genovese, Executive Director, Strauss & Co
bina@straussart.co.za / 083 680 9944
Important South African and International Art
Monday 11 November 2013
4 pm Day Sale
8 pm Evening Sale
Venue
The Wanderers Club Ballroom, 21 North Street, Illovo, Johannesburg
Preview
Friday 8 November to Sunday 10 November from 10 am to 5 pm
Walkabout
Sunday 10 November at 11 am
Enquiries and catalogues office: +27 (0) 11 728 8246 Fax: +27 (0) 11 728 8247
Contact numbers during viewing and auction
Mobile +27 (0) 79 407 5140 and +27 (0) 79 367 0637 Fax: +27 (0) 11 728 8247 i
Illustrated catalogue R150.00
2013 Press Releases
November
October
- 14 Oct 2013 Strauss Online: Time-limited auction sales exclusively online
- 20 Oct 2013 Pocket Money to Millions & students keen eye for art admirably rewarded
- 30 Oct 2013 As Large as Life The Ceramics of Irma Stern
- 30 Oct 2013 Seminal works from Jane Alexander's masters show destined for auction
- 30 Oct 2013 Staging a moment in art - William Kentridge and Opera
- 30 Oct 2013 Through The Eyes Of An Artist - Romantic Accounts Of Africa
September
- 7 Sep 2013 Discovery of Double-sided Laubser Painting Delights at Strauss Spring Auction
- 7 Sep 2013 Hodgins for the brave
- 7 Sep 2013 Hot Stuff from Goodman
- 7 Sep 2013 Humanist's Vision of Early Cape Town
- 7 Sep 2013 Kentridge's Queen of the Night
- 7 Sep 2013 Kruger on the Station
- 7 Sep 2013 Pierneef on a Grand Scale
- 7 Sep 2013 Preller's Exotic Explorations
- 7 Sep 2013 Stern Scintillates at Strauss & Co's October Auction
- 7 Sep 2013 Stern's Island Reveries
- 7 Sep 2013 The Pleasures of Food, Friends and Art
- 7 Sep 2013 WWF Art Auction Poised to Raise Record Funds
- 18 Sep 2013 Millions raised at WWF Art Auction
May
- 10 May 2013 Vladimir Tretchikoff's unique rendition of Prima Ballerina Assoluta, Alicia Markova
- 10 May 2013 You only live twice.....
- 15 May 2013 Strauss & Co to sell one of the world's most reproduced paintings
- 15 May 2013 Tretchi fever heats up
- 20 May 2013 R1 818 880 for Last Supper
- 24 May 2013 Private donation of iconic Chris Levin designs to boost Iziko Collection
April
- 24 Apr 2013 Iconic South African artworks spanning 160 years set to go under the hammer in May
- 29 Apr 2013 Strauss & Co goes Vintage with South African Haute Couture Legend, Chris Levin
February
January
- 1 Jan 2013 "Dis 'n genot van die hart" se Laubser
- 1 Jan 2013 Early Naude' Captures Charms of a Bygone Era at the Cape
- 1 Jan 2013 Gem of a Painting evokes Malay Quarter
- 1 Jan 2013 Large Battiss Combines Sensuality and Virtuosity
- 1 Jan 2013 One of Stern's Most Compelling Portraits
- 1 Jan 2013 Rare Siopis at Auction
- 1 Jan 2013 Van Wouw Skill Shines in Early Italian cast
- 3 Jan 2013 Cape Furniture From The Collection Of Dr Bothma Buitendag, For Sale At Strauss & Co
- 3 Jan 2013 Impact of Modernism Demonstrated in Seminal Painting
- 3 Jan 2013 Important Cape Silver presentation covered cup, John Townsend, circa 1830
- 10 Jan 2013 Contemporary Jewellery by Design Maestro Erich Frey For Sale At Strauss & Co
- 14 Jan 2013 Chairman's Report 2012