Strauss & co - 7 March 2011, Cape Town
154 275 Alexis Preller SOUTH AFRICAN 1911-1975 Gold Kouros signed and dated 69 oil and gold leaf on panel 61 by 51cm R1 800 000–2 200 000 PROVENANCE Acquired directly from the artist by Hennie Diederiks Coba Diederiks Gold Kouros is infused with Alexis Preller’s love of Greek culture and of the perfect male form. Not only did he meet Guna Massyn, the attractive youth who was to become his life’s companion but in 1968 he also undertook a trip to Greece. Thrilled to be exploring the ancient Aegean history, culture and mythology that had so fascinated him, Preller toured many sites including Delphi, the seat of Apollo and the famed oracle. As the son of Zeus, Apollo has been variously recognised as a god of light and the sun; truth and prophecy; medicine and healing. Being supportive of all the arts and the very epitome of civilization, Apollo is seen to be both creative and handsome. Apollo’s youthfulness is captured in the sculpted figure of the kouros, which has come to represent the ideal of male beauty. Widespread across the archaic Greek world, they were generally carved from marble. As the ravages of time have taken their toll on many of these ancient sculptures, so limbs and even heads have been chipped away and lost. Yet it is this very pared-down torso that so appealed to the artist – its absence of identifying features lending a universal appeal and anonymity that adds potency to Preller’s abstract theme. As Karel Nel has pointed out in his authoritative monograph co-authored with Esmé Berman, this is no individual but a powerful conception of manhood.“One fails to be concerned about the incompleteness of the figure: the mental image of this form is of a total being.” i In 1968 Preller wrote: Greece was fine and good and healing for me and I loved being there. ... In Athens I went often to the Museum, concentrating on about five things, and finally on the last day stayed long with the 6th century kouros from Megara. ii Inspired by these figures and what they may represent, Preller sought ways of developing this new theme in his paintings. He began experimenting with gestural abstraction that minimises contour lines and creates the curious palpitating effect of both integrating the figure into the ground and projecting it forward. The gold leaf, a technique learnt from Jean Welz, enhances the iconic status of this symbol of beauty and pulsates against the Aegean turquoise at the right. The painting thus becomes a dynamic evocation of those timeless and static archaic figures. According to Coba Diederiks, Preller’s use of gold leaf was inspired by the brass shields which he had seen in the Museum of Marathon. When a force of just 1 000 Athenian warriors routed a 24 000-strong Persian army at the Battle of Marathon in 490BC through a pre-dawn surprise attack, Pheidippides was dispatched to carry the news of victory to Athens. Today’s marathons commemorate that historic run. Coba Diederiks (née Van Heerden) first met Alexis Preller when she was appointed to direct and organise exhibitions at the South African Association of Arts Gallery located in the Norman Eaton-designed Polley’s Arcade in Pretoria. Her academic qualifications and temperament perfectly complemented Preller’s innovative and meticulous approach to the presentation of his work, laying the foundations for an ongoing professional partnership and enduring friendship. Coba explains that her husband, Hennie Diederiks, taught Alexis how to achieve the intaglio surfaces of his works by casting his three dimensional clay reliefs in fibreglass. This Gold Kouros was subsequently acquired in part payment for imparting these technical skills. i Esmé Berman and Karel Nel, Alexis Preller: Collected Images , Shelf Publishing, 2009, pp225-227. ii Stephan Gray, Artlook , Feb/Mar 1976, p5.
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