Strauss & co - 16 February 2019, Cape Town
60 44 Robert Hodgins SOUTH AFRICAN 1920–2010 Landscape with Figures signed, dated ‘97 and inscribed with the title, medium and ‘begun 1/7/97’ on the reverse oil and charcoal on canvas 90 by 120 cm R800 000 – 1 000 000 EXHIBITED Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, Hodgins at Goodman Gallery , 1998. ITEM NOTES Robert Hodgins once famously described ‘painting to be “a bit like surfing” in that a good deal of time is spent bobbing about, waiting for the right wave to come along’. 1 Landscape with Figures demon- strates both his artistic restraint and incredible daring, arguably situating Hodgins as the progenitor of con- temporary South African painting. Described by Neil Dundas as ‘en- igmatic and romantic’, Hodgins was an artist ‘with a fascinating interpre- tation of the relationships surround- ing him. Through his expressive painting, Hodgins created a parallel universe in which an imaginary human incident took shape in a pow- erfully affective visual field’. 2 Full of the theatrical tropes that characterise his oeuvre, the viewer is greeted by a single figure (Ubu) who stands framed by a prosceni- um arch painted in a dense field of cadmium red. For the stage and arch, Hodgins uses its opposing complimentary, emerald green. On either side, standing in a watery field of purple is the audience; two totemic figures, whose loving embrace resembles Brancusi’s sculpture, The Kiss . A hill of deeper purple disap- pears into the diluted horizon line, where a tiny silhouetted figure who has strayed from the play, stands on-board a flash of yellow within a barrelling expanse of delicately rendered light. With a swift swipe, Hodgins pokes at the yellow, leaving just a trace of his brush in an other- wise controlled composition. Highlighting the importance of Hodgins’ journey through the spectrum, Dundas notes that ‘this division into two utterly different planes, is quite deliberate. There will often be doorways or portals in the sense that someone has moved from their world, rich in colour, to being a sort of outcast’. 3 Three days after this painting was started, Hodgins joined William Kentridge and Deborah Bell to pres- ent Ubu: +/-101 at the Observatory Museum in Grahamstown as part of the National Arts Festival. Titled Ubu Centenaire: historie d’un farceur criminal , the twenty-four plate portfo- lio tells the ‘story of a criminal jester’ 4 and represents each artist’s journey through the character of Ubu. Ubu’s presence in the colour- ful drama of this painting signals Hodgins’ Dadaist sensibilities. His determination to test the rules of painting belies an intuitive explora- tion into the subtleties and limits of his medium. As Dundas recalls ‘He loved the smell and textures and feel of painting on canvas. He’d combine pure pigments and people would say, “You can’t put those colours together.” He’d say, “There are no boundaries in art. If you can make something clash and work together then it will sing.’’’ 5 1. Kathryn Smith. (2000) Robert Hodgins: Biography . Artthrob Issue 34. https:// artthrob.co.za/00jun/artbio.html [Accessed 19 December 2018] 2. Neil Dundas, pers. comm., interview at Robert Hodgins, Past/Modern , Cape Town Art Fair, 19 February, 2017. 3. ibid. 4. Rory Doepel. (1997) UBU: ±101: William Kentridge, Robert Hodgins, Deborah Bell , Johannesburg: French Institute of South Africa. 5. ibid.
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