Site Loader
Rock Street, San Francisco
  • Current Language:
  • fr
  • Select Language:

This is the rating and price for Mikhael Subotzky; South African 1981-; Joe, Cape Town Foreshore by Mikhael Subotzky


 Online
Mikhael Subotzky born in 1981
About the lot N° 213
Mikhael Subotzky; South African 1981-; Joe, Cape Town Foreshore
Medium: inkjet print on cotton rag paper
Size : 55 by 77cm excluding frame; 69,5 by 91,5 by 4cm including frame
Edition:
Signature:
Price: 2 438.49 USD It's free to register now to view!
Estimate (low-high) : 50000 ZAR-70000 ZAR It's free to register now to view!
Strauss & Co, auctioneer It's free to register now to view!

Sale Title : Session Two: Monday Day Sale It's free to register now to view!
Sale date : 27 Jul 2020 It's free to register now to view!
Sale Reference : 61K1M76RES Online sale

Provenance :
Exhibited : Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, Die Vier Hoeke and Umjiegwana, 2006.
Literature :
Notes : The work is from the series Umjiegwana (The Outside). This body of work was created as a counterpoint to Subotzky's first photographic series Die Vier Hoeke, which examined life and conditions inside Pollsmoor Prison (Cape Town). In Umjiegwana, Subotzky followed up with several former inmates he had kept in contact with. Umjiegwana: The Outside According to their myth of origin, South Africa's prison gangs were founded by two nineteenth century bandits, Nongoloza and Kilikijan. They were young and black and proud, and they become bandits because stealing the white man's gold was better than going underground to dig it up. Eventually, the myth continues, both were hunted down and captured. Together, they invented a language fit for a life of captivity. Being men of the caves and the hills, their prison language bore their fantasies of the outdoors. Everything expanded. A day was called a year. An overcrowded cell became a vast highveld plain. But to prevent themselves from being carried away into madness, they reminded themselves every day that they were in fact binne die vier hoeke, and not Umjiegwana - outside. These two concepts became the touchstones of their language. Today, in 2006, the relationship between language and place has been folded inside out. On the streets of the Cape Flats, the words of Die Vier Hoeke are used to talk of Umjiegwana. Young men describe the politics and spaces of their ghettos in prison language; neighbourhoods thus become jails, each piece of drug turf a massive prison cell of the initiated … In their neighbourhoods, Die Vier Hoeke and Umjiegwana have been mixed up, for they have come to form equal parts of lived experience … About four out of five of these people will spend the first half their adult lives in and out of prison, taking Umjiegwana to Die Vier Hoeke, and Die Vier Hoeke to Umjeigwana. Jonny Steinberg
Condition_report : Good. Behind glass. Floated to backing board: not laid down.

Interested in valuating work by this artist ? 

AfricartMarket Insights

Access exclusive information.Sign-up here for our newsletter and we’ll keep you updated. You can unsubscribe at any time.

 

We respect your privacy. No spam.