Strauss & co - 7 November 2016, Johannesburg

155 Tabletop Still Life bears testimony to Maud Sumner’s close affiliation to Paris as the epicenter of European culture in the early part of the twentieth century. She began her art career as a student of the L’École de Paris, and throughout her life returned to live and work in the city that nurtured her artistic sensibilities. She returned to Paris after the war in 1947 and was immediately drawn to the new artistic trends, ‘the new preoccupation with abstract art and the importance of colour.’ 1 The work of Henri Matisse was now certainly absorbed and adapted in to her painting. We see a distinctive simplification of form, the use of bold colours and a move towards a more abstract vision. 2 The blocks of colour arranged on the surface, moreover, some very thinly applied, are reminiscent of Matisse’s early Fauvist still lifes in which he deliberately left the texture of the unpainted canvas showing through. 3 1 Frieda Harmsen. (1992) Maud Sumner: Painter and Poet , Pretoria: J. L. van Schaik. Page 76. 2 Ibid . Pages 76 and 77. 3 Federico Freschi. (2016) Henri Matisse: Rhythm and Meaning , Johannesburg: Standard Bank Gallery. Page 42. 221 Maud Frances Eyston SUMNER south african 1902–1985 Tabletop Still Life signed oil on canvas laid down on board 36,5 by 44 cm R200 000 – 300 000

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