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Descubra la tasación y los precios de esta y más obras de arte africano en Africartmarket. Madeira Street Scene de Marion Arnold


Marion Arnold nacido en 1947
Sobre el lote Lote N° 30
Madeira Street Scene
Medios: oil on canvas
Talla : 50.5 x 40.5 cm Precio: 37 797.06 USD 🔓Sin tarjeta de crédito.
Estimación (baja/alta) : 500000 ZAR-800000 ZAR 🔓Sin tarjeta de crédito.
Aspire Art Auctions, subastador 🔓Sin tarjeta de crédito.

Título de venta : Historic, Modern & Contemporary Art 🔓Sin tarjeta de crédito.
Fecha de la venta : 31/10/2016 🔓Sin tarjeta de crédito.
Referencia de la subasta : Live Sale

Notas : Irma Stern’s Madeira Street Scene conjures a world of desire. It is a place to which she returned often – we know that she visited the island off the south-west coast of Portugal in 1931 for three months, in 1950, 1962 and again in 1963, when she stayed for four months. In the artist’s words, ‘Madeira, to me a wordless concept of earliest delights. Sun and bright colours and beautiful children with big, dark eyes. Flowers covering the walls of the brightly-coloured houses’ (Schoeman 1994:99). Stern captures this scene from a high vantage point. It’s as if we are standing on a balcony where the artist stood, gazing over the balustrade, taking in the view of the houses lining the street below. We can only imagine what she was thinking. Madeira was a place she clearly loved to visit whether en-route to Europe or for extended painting trips. Its Portuguese character, peoples and flavours would, no doubt, have evoked particular associations for her, amongst these – most powerfully – her memories of falling in love with Portuguese author and professor, Hipolito Raposo, whom she had met on board ship in 1923. As Marion Arnold intuits, he ‘had been her grand passion and, on Madeira, she must have remembered his magnetism’ (Arnold 1995:20). In October 1931 she wrote to her good friend Roza van Gelderen: ‘I have made a good many pictures – I think you will like … But how I can go away from here and feel happy again I do not know – it is so full of beauty and color and life’ (Arnold 1995:20). This is, in all likelihood, a later painting, possibly post-dating her 1950 Madeira visit, when her brushwork loosened and her paint was more expressively, but still thickly, applied in rapid brushstrokes. The effect is of a painting seething with passion and pleasure as if the artist has drawn on all her painterly power to relive moments of this first love. Emma Bedford

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