Evening Sale
Live Virtual Auction, 28 May 2024
Evening Sale
About this Item
signed
Notes
In addition to being a prolific painter and printmaker, Walter Battiss was a passionate student of Southern African rock art, publishing no fewer than seven books on the subject in the 1940s and 50s. The elongated figures typical of his art were directly inspired by his large collection of rock art photographs and tracings. In the 1960s, his work was characterised by a sgraffito technique (scratching images through layers of oil paint) and in the early 1970s Battiss invented an imaginary artistic construct, Fook Island, which he populated with material culture (a Fook alphabet, currency, postage stamps, passport, etc.). His numerous travels to the Middle East and to various Greek islands were constant sources of inspiration.
Provenance
Johans Borman Fine Art Gallery, Cape Town.
Private Collection.
Literature
Various Authors (1961) Our Art 2, Pretoria: The South African Association for the Advancement of Knowledge and Culture, illustrated in black and white on page 4.