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

Descubra la tasación y los precios de esta y más obras de arte africano en Africartmarket. Pieter Hugo; South African 1976-; Pieter Hugo, Cape Town, South Africa, 2004, Looking Aside Series de Pieter Hugo


 En línea
Pieter Hugo nacido en 1976
Sobre el lote Lote N° 57
Pieter Hugo; South African 1976-; Pieter Hugo, Cape Town, South Africa, 2004, Looking Aside Series ,2004
Medios: pigment ink print on cotton rag paper laid down on board
Talla : image size: 98 by 79cm 116,5 by 94,5 by 5cm including frame
Edición:
Firma:
Precio: 2 475.00 USD 🔓Sin tarjeta de crédito.
Estimación (baja/alta) : 50000 ZAR-70000 ZAR 🔓Sin tarjeta de crédito.
Strauss & Co, subastador 🔓Sin tarjeta de crédito.
,Lugar de venta : Cape Town, Western Cape, ZA
Título de venta : Portway to Cohen: A Collector’s Legacy and Other Properties - Session One 🔓Sin tarjeta de crédito.
Fecha de la venta : 21/02/2026 🔓Sin tarjeta de crédito.
Referencia de la subasta : R7FH4508UY Online sale

Procedencia :
Exhibited : Stevenson, Cape Town, Looking Aside, 2004, another example from the edition exhibited. Stevenson, Cape Town, South African art 1840 " now, 19 January - 5 February 2005. Brodie/Stevenson, Johannesburg, Self/Not-Self, 19 Feb to 26 March 2009, another example from the edition exhibited.
Literature : Michael Stevenson (2005) South African Art 1840 - Now, Johannesburg: GAU, illustrated in colour, unpaginated. Pieter Hugo (2006) Looking Aside, California: Punctum Press, illustrated in colour.
Notas : In 2003, towards the end of a residency at the Italian communication centre Fabrica, Pieter Hugo began a portrait series depicting South Africans with albinism. The work marked a decisive turn towards the stark, frontal studio style that would become a signature of his practice. Using artificial light and frontal address, Hugo's work drew on the visual language of British art director Terry Jones and the confrontational editorial photography of Oliviero Toscani, best known for his work with Benetton and the magazine project Colors. Transposed to the South African context, where documentary photography was still largely aligned with older, inherited traditions of photojournalism, these references were both conspicuous and provocative. Hugo was acutely aware of the ethical tensions surrounding colour documentary photography in Africa. Post-colonial critics increasingly questioned the voyeuristic licence historically afforded to white photographers working on the continent. Hugo responded by foregrounding his own visibility and presence within the photographic encounter: "I am six foot tall, I have blond hair and blue eyes " I stick out like a sore thumb … Often I am as intently observed as the people I photograph. I am the novelty factor, not the other way round."1 Rather than pursue the rhetoric of the candid moment, he embraced a method based on prolonged engagement, mutual observation and deliberate staging. This self-portrait forms part of that reckoning. Photographed in the same manner as the subjects of his portrait series, it extends Hugo's scrutiny to himself. While the image does not appear in his debut photobook Looking Aside (2006), the publication includes a portrait of his grandmother, underscoring the degree to which Hugo's forensic approach encompassed both strangers and intimates. Self-portraiture has remained an intermittent but significant element of his practice, resurfacing in later bodies of work including Kin (2006"13), Nollywood (2009) and There's a Place in Hell for Me and My Friends (2011"12). In recent years, Hugo has returned to his earlier frontal style in projects such as Solus Vol. I (2022), which presents portraits of non-binary, street-cast models. 1. Sean O'Toole, interview with Pieter Hugo, Cape Town, 4 November 2004
Condition_report :

¿Interesado en tasar la obra de este artista?  

AfricartMarket Insights

Tenga la certeza de que accederá a información exclusiva.Inscríbete a la newsletter y descubre las últimas novedades y ofertas.

Respetamos su privacidad. No spam.