Strauss & co - 2017 Boerneef

34 DOROTHY KAY 1886-1964 Variations on a Theme signed and dated 1959 inscribed with the title and artist’s name on a South African National Gallery label adhered to the reverse oil on board 85 x 61 cm EXHIBITIONS South African National Gallery, Cape Town, Dorothy Kay , June 1982, catalogue number 67 Eastern Province Society of Arts and Crafts, 42nd Exhibition, 13 - 24 October 1959 LITERATURE Marjorie Reynolds (ed.) (1991) The Elvery Family: A Memory: Dorothy Kay , Cape Town: The Carrefour Press. Illustrated in colour on page 182. Marjorie Reynolds (1989) Everything You Do is a Portrait of Yourself: Dorothy Kay, A Biography , Rosebank: Alec Marjorie Reynolds. pages 359, 361-365 and 378. Illustrated in colour on page 361. Kilbourn Collection “In the final two decades of her career, Kay produced a remarkable group of eccentric portraits and absurdist still-lives to which the present lot belongs. Variations on a Theme, painted in 1959, shortly after her iconic Deck Chairs in the Wind, and in the same year as the very witty Three Mirrors, was chosen for exhibition by the Eastern Province Society of Arts and Crafts in 1959. The work had been inspired by sight of a group of family umbrellas hanging from a recently acquired stand: ‘look what l’ve found...Variations on a theme would be the best way of explaining it - a group of umbrellas & the theme is really a straight line - which comes in to it too - lots of them & six umbrellas - ...My old Aunt Annie parasol (wedding present) Jeffrey’s black brolly - 2 of Joan’s, very elegant! & 1 I bought from C.T. - l mended it - & an old beach brolly of mine - & a stick!‘ 1 The composition of Variations on a Theme is wonderfully complex. What appears at first glance to be a group of casually stacked brollies is rather a sophisticated arrangement of angular and overlapping planes, spindly and crisscrossing lines, and strong, bisecting bands of colour. On close inspection, whatever depth the artist suggested in the flapping and pleated fabric canopies is consistently undermined by the interlocking shards of flat colour, not to mention the scored lines cut into the veneer of the board. Moreover, lines and painted edges beginning out of frame end as wire rib tips or ferrules, while others simply disappear altogether into the painted surface. These lines, together with the inflexible steel shafts, crook handles in cane, delicate steel ribs, the clean folds of waxed fabric, and the other more recognisable umbrella components, make certain that the picture is held firmly together by a grid that is elaborate and subtle, but always pleasingly decorative. The artist was thrilled with the painting: ‘the umbrellas is a delightful picture to look at & add to: on & on, always something else to do... more colour- more line, more imagination - such Heaven!’“ 2 1 Marjorie Reynolds. (1989) Everything You Do is a Portrait of Yourself: Dorothy Kay, A Biography , Rosebank: Alec Marjorie Reynolds. Page 361. 2 Ibid. Page 362. Source: Strauss & Co Auction Catalogue, Johannesburg, November 2016

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