Strauss & co - 17 February 2018, Cape Town

168 Strauss & co contemporary art auction EXHIBITED Resident Artist, Standard Bank National Festival of the Arts, Grahamstown, July 1993. LITERATURE Rory Doepel. (1993) Karel Nel: Transforming Symbols . Johannesburg: Wits University Press. Illustrated in colour on page 28. 61 Karel Nel SOUTH AFRICAN b1955 Schism I signed and dated 1993 pastel and sprayed pigment on bonded fibre fabric 230 by 174cm R500 000 – 700 000 from Mali. This place of rest and of access to the subconscious evokes the energetic and invisible worlds through the radiant and ethereal traces which seem to float in the transparency of space itself. In the late 1980s, Karel Nel first began a series of diptychs, two similar yet contrasting works hanging side by side, opening up a visual dialogue between the two drawings and the viewer. The initial diptych, Awaiting and House of the Initiate , is the one visually quoted in Schism I and II . These 1988 drawings were selected and shown on the Cape Town Triennial of that year. These strongly delineated emblematic works were characterised by fields of flat colour, reminiscent of the simplicity of a ‘colouring-in’ book. At the time, Nel described the charged schematics as being ‘intelligently dumb’: direct, yet complex; a diagrammatic yet informative rendition of ‘reality’. Schism I was conceived and executed as one of a pair of drawings. In the foreground a single Strelitzia nicolai leaf stands in a glass cylinder in front of a pair of large Nel drawings from 1988, Awaiting and House of the Initiate . The two drawings of the diptych stand side by side and are redrawn as they stretch from his front door, through his bedroom into his bathroom. The images dramatically recede into the distance in the confines of his then tiny living space in Rivonia. The glass cylinder, partially filled with water, supports the large poised leaf which arcs into the room, a recurring leitmotif in Nel’s work. Its long green stem within the transparent cylinder manifests a parallax shift at the water line, the invisible disruptive seam between the uneven densities of air and water. A small provincial Chinese plate on the floor is filled with white bauhinia blooms. In the distance next to his bed, a gridded base indicates the symbolic presence of a Dogon Toguna post

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