Dr Matthys Johannes Strydom Family Collection, Evening Sale

Live Virtual Auction, 22 November 2022

Dr Matthys Johannes Strydom Family Collection Live Auction
About the Session

Matthys Strydom was a true connoisseur of South African art. As director of the well-known Strydom Gallery in George for more than 30 years, he was responsible for the selection of a wide variety of prime art works from all over the country for the annual exhibitions. The Dr Matthys Johannes Strydom Family Collection offered by Strauss & Co gives collectors and art lovers the chance to become part of this great selection from the art history of our country.


  • Nita Spilhaus; Landskap met Bome (Landscape with Trees)
  • Nita Spilhaus; Landskap met Bome (Landscape with Trees)
  • Nita Spilhaus; Landskap met Bome (Landscape with Trees)


Lot Estimate
ZAR 35 000 - 50 000

About this Item

German/South African 1878-1967
Landskap met Bome (Landscape with Trees)

signed with the artist's monogram; signed and dated 1946 on the reverse; inscribed with the artist's name, title and medium on a label adhered to the reverse

oil on canvasboard
34,5 by 44,5cm excluding frame; 52 by 62 by 4cm including frame

Notes

Looking at Nita Spilhaus’ oeuvre trees are her dominant subject matter and convey a sense of soft yet confident grandeur. In Lonely Trees (lot 254) Spilhaus expresses majesty and strength in the strong stone pines she has painted. The branches are thick, revealing their age with their fissured bark. Stone pines are a particular favourite for Spilhaus, and she painted many scenes with them in various groupings, often rendering them reaching to touch the mountain tops and soft evening skies. It is interesting to note that stone pines are not indigenous. They were brought here by the Huguenot refugees that settled at the Cape, who grew them from seeds collected in their native France. Spilhaus found all trees intriguing, disallowing her to be restricted to her favourite stone pines. “Old gnarled trees, fresh young saplings, oaks and firs all fascinated her.”1

Upon reviewing Nita Spilhaus’ exhibition at Martin Melck House Galleries in December 1963, the critic, Andre Cilliers, noted of her tree paintings that “Each one is an individual portrait of a particular tree. She understands its growth and the conditions that made it the tree it is. Even her slight sketches of trees make one aware that trees don’t just happen, but that every one has a history.”2

In general, Spilhaus preferred relaxed compositions and a realistic palette. The application of paint is clearly visible. Palette knife and brushstrokes contribute significantly to the visual interest of her pictures. Celebrated South African Art Historian Frieda Harmsen observes of Spilhaus’ work, “The seductive quality of the paint above all else is the subject of her artwork, the motif being the mere carrier of the painting.”3 Spilhaus sought for a greater effect than texture and colour alone could provide, she endeavoured to introduce clearly defined shapes and sufficient contrasts in tone to provide both constructive and formal clarity.4

Nita Spilhaus’ contribution to South African art was her excellent technical ability, her romantic feeling towards a scene, and her fundamental sincerity, honesty and respect for the essential
character of a subject.5

1. Magda Sauer (n.d.) 'Nita Spilhaus' in Our Art, Pretoria: Lantern and The S. A. Broadcasting Corporation, page 127.
2. Andre Cilliers, Cape Times, 11 December 1963.
3. Freda Harmsen (1985) Looking at South African Art, Pretoria: Van Schaik, page 44.
4. Ibid, page 212.
5. Sauer, 128.
Peter Elliott (2015) Nita Spilhaus (1878 – 1967),Cape Town: Peter Elliott.

 

Provenance

Dr Matthys Johannes Strydom Family Collection.

View all Nita Spilhaus lots for sale in this auction