Artists

From Albert Adams to Portia Zvavahera, Strauss & Co maintains a detailed database of every artist sold at auction since 2009. Whether it is painting, sculpture, works on paper, photography, ceramics or new media, this searchable database lists by artist every lot offered and provides aggregated data useful to collectors. Famous South African artists like William Kentridge, JH Pierneef, Alexis Preller and Irma Stern are introduced with helpful biographies along with the best contemporary artists.



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Wolf Kibel

South African 1903-1938 


Wolf Kibel was born in Poland. His interest in art began in his childhood home and he studied briefly as a boy under Applebaum, a visiting painter from London who encouraged Kibel’s interest in painting. At the age of 20, Kibel fled to Vienna in Austria to avoid military conscription. It was in Vienna that he was exposed to Modern art and received some informal training between 1923 and 1925. During this time, he suffered extreme privation which was to affect his health for the remainder of his short life. Between 1925 and 1929 Kibel went to Palestine where he lived in Jerusalem and in Tel Aviv. He met many painters including modernist Yitzhak Frenkel. His paintings drew inspiration from the modern artists Chagall, Cézanne and Kokoschka.

In 1929 Kibel came to South Africa where he settled in Cape Town. He decorated the Alhambra Cinema in Cape Town, followed by the Plaza Cinema in Pretoria in 1931. In the same year Kibel exhibited in South Africa for the first time, and met and spent time with Hugo Naudé who taught him etching. Kibel also shared a studio in Cape Town with fellow artist and close friend Lippy Lipschitz.

Kibel’s diverse subject matter included landscapes, portraits, nudes, still lifes and interiors. His palette was muted and his scale small and intimate, and his Expressionistic distortion of forms intensified movement in his images. He produced artwork in a variety of media including oil and watercolour paintings, pastels, etchings, woodcuts and monotypes, and a drawing medium made from soot and candlewax which he used on tissue paper.

Wolf Kibel’s artwork has been exhibited in numerous prestigious group exhibitions internationally, including the Exhibition of South Africa Art held at the Tate Gallery in London in 1948, and in numerous retrospective exhibitions throughout South Africa. He held four solo exhibitions between 1931 and 1937 and died at the age of 34 shortly after his last exhibition. Wolf Kibel is highly regarded as a South African modernist and his artworks are represented in private, major museum and public art collections throughout the country.


100 lots offered      61.00% sold      ZAR 13 853 467
 

  Including Premium and VAT Results include Buyer's Premium and VAT
Wolf Kibel; Lamentation at the Crucifixion
29 Sep 2014
Sold for ZAR 5 270
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
Wolf Kibel; Mother and Child
30 Jul 2014
Sold for ZAR 8 432
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
Wolf Kibel; Still Life with Fruit and Bowls
30 Jun 2014
Sold for ZAR 68 208
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
Wolf Kibel; Motherhood
17 Mar 2014
Sold for ZAR 511 560
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
Wolf Kibel; Houses (recto); Houses (verso)
17 Mar 2014
Sold for ZAR 21 600
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
Wolf Kibel; Nude Study
17 Mar 2014
Sold for ZAR 107 996
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
Wolf Kibel; Figures in a Rural Setting, three
21 Oct 2013
ZAR 18 000 - 24 000
 
Wolf Kibel; Old Man (After Rembrandt)
21 Oct 2013
Sold for ZAR 39 788
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
Wolf Kibel; Houses with Red Roofs
4 Feb 2013
Sold for ZAR 3 564 800
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
Wolf Kibel; Trees in a Landscape
8 Oct 2012
Sold for ZAR 11 710
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
Wolf Kibel; Figures in a Landscape
8 Oct 2012
Sold for ZAR 11 710
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
Wolf Kibel; A Woman Reading
11 Jun 2012
ZAR 5 000 - 8 000