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This is the rating and price for Evening Landscape by Erik Laubscher


Erik Laubscher (1927-2013)
About the lot N° 603
Evening Landscape
Medium: oil on board
Size : 121 by 159,5cm excluding frame
Signature: signed and dated 66
Estimate (low-high) : 400000 ZAR-600000 ZAR It's free to register now to view!
Strauss & Co, auctioneer It's free to register now to view!

Sale Title : Important South African and International Art, Decorative Arts & Jewellery Live Auction It's free to register now to view!
Sale date : 16 Oct 2017 It's free to register now to view!
Sale Reference : Live Sale

Provenance : [Propriété non datée] - Acquired from the artist by the current owner's father
Notes : In 1970 the prolific author and critic, Stephen Gray, wrote an appreciation of Erik Laubscher for the journal Lantern in which he described this Paris-trained painter as “one of South Africa’s leading abstract landscape artists”. Laubscher, noted Gray, “is at his best when capturing disappearing spaciousness and distance. His eye and the clear Cape light resolve planes of land down to essentials, the colouring, though not the content, is virtually psychedelic.” This was still a relatively novel insight in 1970. A decade earlier, in 1961, when Laubscher was still best known for works portraying interlocking abstract forms, he described his work as “essentially concerned with movement, volume, tension – the juxtaposition of forms.” By the time he painted Evening Landscape in 1966 Laubscher had rejected this austerity in favour of making abstracted horizontal studies of the undulating topography of the Swartland and Overberg regions. His planes of colour, some visibly overpainted, record the hard borders of human presence and industry. In a 1965 interview appearing in the Cape Times Laubscher described how his treatment of landscape was still informed by a two-dimensional understanding of pictorial space: “The moment you use perspective your eye travels to a certain point and there it stops and the painting becomes static. I am more concerned with expressing infinite space.” As Gray noted, this meant trees, animals, fences and human figures were not welcome: “There can be no obstacle to the direct experiencing of the landscape into the raw.” * All quotes from Stephen Gray, Erik Laubscher and Landscape, Lantern, March 1970, pages 12-20.

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