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Consulter la cote et le prix de Overberg In Winter par Erik Laubscher


Erik Laubscher (1927-2013)
À propos du lot n° 557
Overberg In Winter
Medium: oil on canvas
Dimensions : 110 by 145cm excluding frame
Signature: signed and dated '96, signed, dated and inscribed with the title, dimensions and artist's address on the reverse
Prix: 82 369.71 USD 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
Estimations(basse-haute) : 400000 ZAR-600000 ZAR 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
Strauss & Co, Salle de vente 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.

Titre de la vente : Important South African & International Art, Decorative Arts & Jewellery Live Auction 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
Date de la vente : 06/03/2017 🔓Accès libre sans carte bancaire.
Référence de l'enchère : Live Sale

Provenance : [Propriété non datée] - Acquired directly from the artist by the current owner
Literature : Hans Fransen. (2009) Erik Laubscher, A Life in Art, Stellenbosch: SMAC Art Gallery. Illustrated in colour on page 226.
Notes : Erik Laubscher returned to South Africa from Paris in 1951. After a period of adjustment, in which he continued to paint in the School of Paris style, Laubscher discovered his true subject: the South African landscape. It was a trip to the Bushman's River near Kenton-on-Sea that set him off on his decades-spanning trajectory describing the land in geometrical bands of colour. Laubscher's earliest work in this style, from the mid to late 1960s, shunned perspective. The moment you use perspective your eye travels to a certain point and there it stops and the painting becomes static, he told the Cape Times in 1965.1 Artist opinions are changeable. This lot, painted three decades later, shows Laubscher still preoccupied with the Cape's landscapes, albeit now with perspective. Aside from the obvious use of perspective in this verdant portrayal of an Overberg farming landscape, this work is noteworthy for its colour palette. Laubscher's colours are vivid, and yet, for all the luminescence of especially his greens, it is a mimetic painting. Contours, borders, dams, gravel tracks and evidence of human labour are pictured in a receding plane. Laubscher thought European painterly styles were inadequate for conveying South Africa's landscapes, which he became acquainted with during his years as a travelling paint salesman. The Swartland and Overberg regions have dimensions, rhythms and character peculiar to themselves, he told framer and collector Joe Wolpe in 1967.2 Stephen Gray. (1970) 'Erik Laubscher and Landscape', in Lantern, March, Vol. XIX, No.3, page 15. Ibid., page 14.

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