Strauss & co - 7 October 2019, Cape Town

209 EXHIBITED MacFadyen Hall of the Transvaal University College (now University of Pretoria), Pretoria, 1931. LITERATURE Dalene Marais (1994) Maggie Laubser: Her Paintings, Drawings and Graphics , Johannesburg and Cape Town: Perskor. Illustrated on page 208, catalogue number 672. Elsa Botha (1964) catalogue number 105. Portraiture was a reoccurring genre for Maggie Laubser throughout her career. It is suggested that the present lot falls under her ‘Langebaan Phase’(1928 - 1932), which corresponds with her excursions to this and other coastal villages, renewing her interest in nature. 1 Where previously sitters were depicted against plain backgrounds (such as in Portrait of a Young Girl ) lot 615, here she experiments with bringing nature into her backdrops. Laubser has included a fantastical horizon line; a small house, with an impossibly steep road leading up to it, sits high upon a hill to the right of the sitter, while the land dips drastically away to the left to reveal the mountains beyond. This phase is also typified by sitters who fill the picture to such an extent that sometimes the tops of their heads are omitted. Additionally, hands become a gestural feature and are used to clutch flowers, stroke a cat, or – as in this instance – support a sitter’s head. In 1931, Laubser held her first exhibition in the Transvaal at the Transvaal University College (now the University of Pretoria). The present lot was one of 34 works included in this exhibition and it was here that it was purchased by the current owner’s grandmother. 1. Dalene Marais (1994) Maggie Laubser: her paintings, drawings and graphics. Johannesburg: Perskor. Page 174. 616 Maggie Laubser SOUTH AFRICAN 1886-1973 Weemoed (Melancholy) signed with the artist’s initials oil on board 37 by 44,5cm R800 000 - 1 200 000 PROVENANCE Mrs JA Kieser, Pretoria, acquired from the exhibition at Pretoria in 1931. Acquired by descent to the current owner from her grandmother, Mrs JA Kieser.

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