Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Spier Contemporary calling! - August 21, 2009

Good news for all, and I mean all, you artists out there. Spier Contemporary 2010 is calling for submissions for their biennial show in March 2010, taking place this year in the City Hall, Cape Town and moving on to Johannesburg and Durban. You can enter up to five items and the cut-off date is 30 October. You need to be 21 but no professional training is required and the entry process is by e-mail. Check the website www.spiercontemporary2010.co.za for the details.

Spier intends that the works be for sale (if the artist so wishes) and takes no commission; AND they give you R4 000 for each work selected for exhibition by their curatorial team, whether or not you are a prize-winner. So where are the drawbacks? Well, there were 2500 entries last year and only around 100 could be selected. Just a couple of months to go. Let’s have a good representation from Hermanus, art destination of the Western Cape.

Contrasts

Bellini is opening tomorrow at 18h30 with a trio of artists showing landcapes - Louis Ströh van der Walt, Elizabeth Miller-Vermeulen and Stellenbosch-based Vernon Swart, whose work “Franschhoek Vineyard” is illustrated.

Vernon Swart - Franschhoek Vineyard, 60cm x 40cm, Mixed media

This innovative gallery is on the move and an announcement may be made at the exhibition. While the regular patrons of Willie’s Cappuccino-Bar may miss the salty tang in the air, I am told their proposed new premises are bang in the centre of our gallery route.

Comings and goings

Since ArtsPage started nearly three years ago, I have had to add artspace after artspace to my database, and delete only two. This is really good and I encourage our galleries to byt vas and make the necessary adjustments to hold on through the winter. A leading gallery in Cape Town, Bell Roberts, closed its doors last month and in Johannesburg another long-established gallery has done likewise. But our mayor’s succinct comment at the opening of Gallery La Marey was straightforward: I did not make notes, the opening was far too buzzing for that, but essentially he said “Those businesses which deliver service will flourish – the ones who do not do so will disappear.”

The passage through from High Street to Chilli Pepper has been officially named “High Street Close.” It is home to a new gallery showcasing the works of Deidre Winer. More about this international arts person soon.

Johans Borman Gallery

Emphasis on this page is on local gallery news but Borman was a leading gallerist in Onrus for a good few years so it is appropriate to offer congratulations on his 10-20 Exhibition in Cape Town. He is celebrating twenty years in the art business, ten of them in Cape Town at his Upper Buitengracht Street gallery.

One of his protégées, Hennie Niemann Jnr, achieved a remarkable price for a recently-executed small portrait sold at Stephan Welz/Sotheby’s August auction in Johannesburg. The work, estimated at R12-16 000 must have been fiercely contested as the successful bidder paid nearly four times the top estimate. At the same sale, an attractive study in oils “Lisianthus in a Glass Vase” by well-known local arts personality Louis van Heerden was sold for R31 000.

Galerie Gregoire

At the gallery in Main Road, Onrus are some fifty works on loan to commemorate the centenary of the birth of Gregoire Boonzaier. Gregoire is indeed an icon who by his talent and prolific output won a special place on the living room walls and in the hearts of many. He was co-founder of the New Group together with Terence McCaw and Walter Battiss in 1938, breaking new ground in a conservative and parochial SA art scene. His long life and the fact that he remained creative until the end has meant that his works often appear at auction and new generations of artlovers get to hang a Gregoire of their own.

The exhibition has been arranged around themes and the display of drawings paired with linocuts enables a comparison of technique and mood to be made. Clearly not all of his themes can be shown but there is more than enough to delight. ArtsPage joins the artist’s son in expressing appreciation to owners who have made available choice works for this show which runs till 31 December.

Tretchi orchid

Another icon, South African by adoption, was Vladimir Tretchikoff. It appears that the work billed in the catalogue for the much-publicised Brett Kebble art auction as “Lost Orchid” was indeed not the original but may still have been by the artist. The buyer might need a bit more assurance than that to go through with the R3million sale.

Keep you news coming to me at niblos@telkomsa.net

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