Important South African Art
Live Auction, 16 May 2011
Session Two
About this Item
signed
Notes
This idyllic rural image of water-carriers must have been painted in the mid-1940s as it was acquired in 1948 by the current owner’s parents from Maggie Laubser’s solo exhibition at the Oranje Koffiehuis in Bloemfontein.
Towards the mid-1930s Laubser left the Cape on a protracted working holiday of nine months, staying with a family on a farm in Standerton, as Johan van Rooyen reports in his monograph. During this visit she also worked at Nelspruit and Irene, amongst others. Here she executed numerous studies of wood and water-carriers and it’s possible that this painting was inspired in part by those experiences.
The painting displays ample evidence of what Van Rooyen calls her “quality of sincerity’i and quotes the artist:
I still delight in it when people find pleasure in my work. To paint is to reach out, hoping that one will touch. One wants to be understood.ii
i Johan van Rooyen, Maggie Laubser, C. Struik Publishers, Cape Town and Johannesburg, 1974, page 22.
ii Laubser in an interview with Johan van Rooyen, SAAA Art News, November 1968.
Provenance
Prof and Mrs J S Booysens, Stellenbosch, acquired from an exhibition in Bloemfontein ca. 1948, S13460.
Exhibited
Oranje Koffiehuis Bloemfontein, 1948, catalogue number 15.
Literature
Dalene Marais, Maggie Laubser, Her Paintings Drawings and Graphics, Perskor, 1994, page 286, catalogue number 1142.