Strauss & co - 10 October 2016, Cape Town
580 Stanley Faraday PINKER SOUTH AFRICAN 1 924-2012 Tietiesbaai signed; signed and inscribed ‘Landscape: Titi’s Baai’ on the stretcher oil on canvas 60 by 120cm R500 000–700 000 Unusually sparse for Stanley Pinker, whose canvasses are often crowded with interesting and contradictory images of a topsy-turvy colonial and post-colonial South Africa, this landscape is no less complex in composition and in conceptual intent. Represented in a couple of broad brushstrokes and horizontal bands of colour, the artist manages to suggest an expansive coastal line of sand, sea and sky, with a small green tent embedded in a veritable knot of sand dunes. The green tent, seemingly arbitrarily placed in Pinker’s composition is emblematic of the artist’s dominant presence and appears sporadically in Pinker’s work, most notably in a work titled ‘ ’Once upon a time there was…’’. The work adorns the cover of the Pinker monograph, published by Michael Stevenson in 2004, and represents, according to Pinker, a strong sense of ‘’being there’’. As a result, the present landscape has a special significance. According to Pinker, he often found inspiration in drawings and ideas, which, he goes on to say, “become paintings which are meant to be LOOKED at: they are visual experiences, using the traditional elements of paintings, where I see the structural organisation of a surface every bit as important as its colour.’’ 1 1. Esmé Berman. (1983) Art & Artists of South Africa: An illustrated bibliographical dictionary and historical survey of painters, sculptors & graphic artists since 1875, Cape Town: A. A. Balkema publishers. Page 336 256
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