Modern, Post-War and Contemporary Art
Live Virtual Auction, 17 - 18 May 2021
Modern, Post-War and Contemporary Art
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About this Item
signed; dated 1988, inscribed with the artist's name and numbered 8803 on the reverse
Notes
Artist Focus: John Meyer
Lots 201-204
John Meyer was born in Bloemfontein in 1942, the same year, incidentally, in which Edward Hopper, the giant of American realist painting, unveiled his extraordinary and instantly recognisable Nighthawks (fig. 1). The coincidence is a neat one, as Meyer’s impressive body of work, built up over half a century, has made him the doyen of the realist movement in southern Africa. Briefly trained at the Witwatersrand Technical College School of Art in Johannesburg in the early 1960s, and accustomed to long international painting stints, particularly in Britain and the United States, his unique, mature style, typified by striking illusion and rich, dazzling brushwork, has made his reputation among collectors both locally and abroad. Thanks to his long association with the Everard Read gallery (his first solo show there was in 1972), he has consistently exhibited new and distinct bodies of work. While he has elevated the local landscape and portraiture tradition, he has also showed-off his exquisite versatility across still life, narrative and genre painting.
Four fabulous Meyer examples are included here (Lots 201–204). The group might only hint at the artist’s vast technical ingenuity, but it certainly gives a sense of his wide-ranging subjects and flair for the dramatic: we see an expansive Golden Gate landscape (Lot 202), a fly-fisherman knee-deep in foaming rapids (Lot 203), a dronelike view across the Olifants River Valley (Lot 201), and a Karoo-stoep still life with its tired succulents, sturdy window shutters and its unravelling cane table (Lot 204).T
Thanks to the artist and his studio staff for assistance with cataloguing these lots.
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"This work is about as literal as I get… Some simplification was needed, so I did away with some trees and other clutter, and I repositioned the road to add to the compositional pull to the centre of the picture plane."