Strauss & co - 11 November 2019, Johannesburg
139 146 Joachim Schönfeldt SOUTH AFRICAN 1958– Peahen and Social Pyramid (Orange) signed, one dated 2000 and the other 2001 Peahen : oil paint and varnish; Social Pyramid : enamel paint; each with hand embossing each 52 by 78 cm R30 000 – 50 000 The peahen, depicted here in high gloss paint on embossed paper, is one of the four animals frequently appearing in Joachim Schönfeldt’s early works: The others being the lioness, the cow and the eagle. They are the female counterparts of the animals in the New Testament that represent the four apostles Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. They stand as icons of what the artist calls a possible ‘pan-African religion’. Here, Schönfeldt pairs the image of the peahen with a series of four floating orange discs that represents a social pyramid, ‘a diagrammatic representation of social strata, with the king at the apex and the people at the base, and the tiers of the church, the military and the bourgeoisie in between’. 1. Joachim Schönfeldt (2004) The Model Men , Johannesburg: Wits Art Galleries, page 10.
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