Modern, Post War and Contemporary Art
Live Auction, 11 November 2019
Session One
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
About this Item
signed and numbered 28/35
Notes
William Kentridge’s work Blue Head was made during the early nineties, a transitional period in South Africa: after the release of Nelson Mandela and before the first democratic elections in 1994. This was a period of extreme intensity, of enormous possibility and the looming threat that the process towards democracy might be derailed by violence. Internationally revered, Kentridge’s imposing and emblematic Blue Head magnificently captures a moment in the country’s troubled history, the monumental disembodied head with closed eyes poignantly and optimistically facing upwards while the picture plane bears the painful scars of a turbulent and violent society. Drawing continues to be the core of all Kentridge’s work, whether a drawing to create singular works on paper, drawing for printmaking, for sculpture or filmed projection. Though quiet and still, his drawing and printmaking are as varied and complex as his films and his large-scale projects found in major centres around the world.
Literature
Susan A Stewart and Kay Wilson (2006) William Kentridge Prints, Johannesburg: David Krut. Illustrated on page 47.