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Lot 139: Alan Crump SOUTH AFRICAN 1949-2009 - Ark

Est: R50,000 ZAR - R70,000 ZAR
Strauss & CoIllovo, South AfricaMay 20, 2019

Item Overview

Description

Alan Crump
SOUTH AFRICAN 1949-2009
Ark
signed and dated '93; inscribed with the artist's name, the date and 'Johannesburg' on the reverse; signed, dated and inscribed with the title on
the reverse of the backing board; inscribed with the artist's name, the date, the title and the medium on a Goodman Gallery label adhered to the
reverse of the backing board
watercolour on paper
48 by 54cm

PROVENANCE:
Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg.
When Alan Crump was appointed professor and head of the Fine Art department at the University of the Witwatersrand in 1980, through the
influence of Neels Coetzee, it was a radical change from the benign reign of the avuncular Robert Hodgins, who had been acting-head of the
department the year before. Crump fairly terrified junior students with his scathing critique of pedestrian conceptual frameworks and less-thanperfect
craftsmanship. Only 31 years old at the time of his appointment, one of the youngest professors ever appointed at the university, the
Fulbright scholar and international art world luminary shook things up and pushed the boundaries of creative practice and art education and
helped made Wits one of the leading art schools in South Africa in the 1980s and beyond.
“Crump was driven throughout his distinguished career by a fearless vision of excellence”, which he applied not only to teaching and
mentoring, but also to curating, publishing and arts administration – he was influential in local biennales, worked with various galleries and
public and corporate collections, sat on acquisitions committees and advisory boards, and shaped the Standard Bank National Arts Festival,
Grahamstown, in a number of important ways.
A master printmaker and watercolourist, Crump’s own art-making ranged from esoteric conceptual etchings like the Wedge Series (1978), to
the monumental large-scale mining landscapes of breath-taking beauty and technical dexterity that antithetically magnify the ravages and
degradation they depict (1993), and the reduced macro focus of the exquisitely delicate and subtle camphor tree studies of 2001.In the
catalogue for the posthumous retrospective held at the Johannesburg Art Gallery in 2011, Freschi writes that Crump was “an extraordinary man
and a brilliant artist, whose legacy is the professionalism and bold fearlessness that characterises the contemporary South African art world
that he helped to shape”. The calibre of the artists who benefited from coming into his ambit – Jane Alexander; Deborah Bell; Kim Berman;
Candice Breitz; Kendell Geers; Neil Goedhals; Moshekwa Langa; Karel Nel; Walter Oltmann; Joachim Sché¶nfeldt and Diane Victor – is an
indicator of the veracity of that statement.
1. Federico Freschi (ed) (2011) Alan Crump: A Fearless Vision, Johannesburg: Friends of the Johannesburg Art Gallery, page 9.
2. Ibid, page 10.

Artist or Maker

Notes

Day Sale

Auction Details

Modern, Post-War and Contemporary Art

by
Strauss & Co
May 20, 2019, 03:00 PM CAT

The Wanderers Club, Illovo Ballroom, 21 North Street, Illovo, Johannesburg, 2196, ZA