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This is the rating and price for Children Under Apartheid by Dumile Feni


Dumile Feni (1942-1991)
About the lot N° 134
Children Under Apartheid ,1987
Medium: charcoal
Size : 247.5 x 133 cm
Edition:
Signature: signed and dated
Price: 96 674.61 USD It's free to register now to view!
Estimate (low-high) : 800000 ZAR-1200000 ZAR It's free to register now to view!
Aspire Art Auctions, auctioneer It's free to register now to view!
,Sale location : Johannesburg
Sale Title : Historic, Modern & Contemporary Art It's free to register now to view!
Sale date : 17 Jul 2017 It's free to register now to view!
Sale Reference : Live Sale

Provenance :
Exhibited : United Nations, 1986–1989.
Literature :
Notes : Though highly esteemed, Dumile Feni’s work has persistently remained elusive. Dealing with subject matter that is admittedly complex, his work is often consciously political and continues to evoke discomfort. Emerging in the mid-1960s, after the infamous Sharpeville massacre, Feni began to portray the human carnage and psychology of violence that defined the apartheid state.Children under Apartheid follows this thematic concern into the tumultuous 1980s, while Feni lived in exile in the United States. With the rise of student protests a decade before, the 1980s saw an increase in the radicalisation of the youth, which led to the State of Emergency, and once again large-scale police raids, arrests, torture and deaths. Ironically titled as Children under Apartheid, the drawing depicts figures peering from behind jail bars. Suppose these are the young victims of state brutality and subjugation, caged inside apartheid’s prisons – their fate murky and unpredictable, their cardinal sin being the unflinching petitioning for self-determination.Feni devoted his life and his art to the struggle for freedom. The artist spoke out internationally against the “degradation and enslavement of his people”. The penitentiary as a theme therefore consistently features as an aesthetic motif in a series of works Feni made during this time. His style had drastically changed over the years since his earlier expressionistic works, with his lines now more controlled and refined. However, notwithstanding this notable drawing technique, Children under Apartheid further hinges on Feni’s typical leitmotifs. In the margins of these graphic, bold and sharp lines, that give his subjects a robotic masculinity, loose and faint lines creep up unexpectedly, in ways that refuse to eviscerate their sentimentality and frailty. Until his death in 1991, Feni’s work grappled with deep existential questions and the dynamics of human vulnerability that have made his oeuvre as rigorous as it is aesthetically inviting. Athi Mongezeleli Joja
Condition_report :

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