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Hai bisogno di informazioni precise ? Trova il prezzo e altre valutazioni grazie alla nostra banca dati di opere d’arte africane. Gerard Sekoto; South African 1913-1993; Policeman Checking Papers, Paris da Gerard Sekoto


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Gerard Sekoto (1913-1993)
Il lotto Lotto n° 107
Gerard Sekoto; South African 1913-1993; Policeman Checking Papers, Paris
Medium: oil on paper
Dimensione : 30 by 48,5cm excluding frame; 48 by 66 by 3cm including frame
Edizione:
Firma:
Prezzo: 19 250.00 USD 🔓Senza carta di credito.
Stima (bassa/alta) : 200000 ZAR-300000 ZAR 🔓Senza carta di credito.
Strauss & Co, banditore 🔓Senza carta di credito.
,Posizione di vendita : Johannesburg, Gauteng, ZA
Titolo di vendita : Evening Sale - Session One 🔓Senza carta di credito.
Data della vendita : 28/05/2024 🔓Senza carta di credito.
Riferimento dell'asta : 6B47CZHJMR Online sale

Provenienza : [Timeline chronologique] 1961-01-01 | Acquired from the artist circa 1961, and thence by descent
Exhibited :
Literature :
Note : Art is a human virtue and I have given my whole self to it, for it promotes understanding among races rather than destroys it. - Gerard Sekoto In 1939 Gerard Sekoto left his teaching position in Pietersburg (now Polokwane), relocating to the vibrant and multiracial Sophiatown in Johannesburg to pursue a career as a painter. While in Sophiatown, ever-aware of the racial injustices around him, he produced a remarkable body of sensitive and gorgeously coloured vignettes of black urban life. During stays in District Six in Cape Town (1942-1945), and then in Eastwood, on the outskirts of Pretoria (1945- 1947), Sekoto continued to paint evocative and poignant domestic scenes that evoked a powerful sense of resilience and dignity. Dispirited by the socio-political conditions across the country, however, the artist went into exile in 1947, travelling to Paris, via London, never to return to his homeland. While Paris brought the artist much joy - he lost himself in the city's museums and jazz bars - he faced bouts of loneliness and struggled professionally without a strong support network. If his post-exile paintings were often tinged with nostalgia, he certainly never lost his keen sense of social observation. The present lot, painted in 1960, seems to show policeman stopping black citizens off a side street, while well-heeled Parisians get on with their everyday business on the main drag. The artist was clearly moved by this tragic irony and recorded the scene with great care. He made sure to highlight the contrast between the anxious poses of the black figures and the confident air of the policeman; each is surrounded by a shimmering blue halo.
Condition_report :

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