Strauss & co - 4 June 2018, Johannesburg

169 214 Sam Nhlengethwa SOUTH AFRICAN 1955– Image IV signed, dated ‘90 and inscribed with the title on the reverse acrylic and sand mixed with gel on canvas 150 by 200 cm R200 000 – 300 000 Sam Nhlengethwa is best known for his figure-based paintings and collage works exploring themes of social and art history, jazz music and domestic life. This bold abstract composition, with its purposeful brushwork and mysterious orchestration of converging graphic forms, predates Nhlengethwa’s adoption of a figurative style and records the influence of his participation in the Thupelo series of artist workshops. Founded in 1985 by artists David Koloane and Bill Ainslie, the objective of the annual, two-week workshop in Johannesburg was, in the words of Koloane, ‘to inspire artists to research and experiment [with] medium and technique so that they are able to expand their creative vocabulary.’ 1 Nhlengethwa attended every workshop until its demise in 1991. Not without controversy, the Thupelo workshop series is nonetheless associated with a great flourishing of modernist abstraction among urban black artists. Historians have increasingly acknowledged Thupelo’s role in sponsoring personal growth and creative innovation in the face of domineering market forces and political circumstances. 2 1. John Peffer (2009). Art and the End of Apartheid , Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Page 151. 2. Ibid., page 169, and Marilyn Martin (2016). ‘Abstract Art in South Africa: Then and Now’, in Practices of Abstract Art: Between Anarchism and Appropriation , edited by Isabel Wünsche and Wiebke Gronemeyer, Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. Pages 225-248. Sean O’Toole LITERATURE cf. Kathryn Smith (ed.) (2006). Sam Nhlengethwa , Johannesburg: Goodman Gallery Editions. Another example from the series is illustrated in colour on page 52. NOTE This work forms part of a series of four Image abstract paintings. The first in the series is held in the permanent collection at IZIKO: South African National Gallery, Cape Town.

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