Modern and Contemporary Art

Live Virtual Auction, 21 September 2022

Evening Sale

Sold for

ZAR 11 725
Lot 226
  • Albert Adams; Portrait of a Man
  • Albert Adams; Portrait of a Man


Lot Estimate
ZAR 10 000 - 15 000
Selling Price
Incl. Buyer's Premium & VAT
ZAR 11 725

About this Item

South African 1929-2006
Portrait of a Man

signed and dated 1960

Koki-pen on paper
sheet size: 75 by 55cm, unframed

Notes

Albert Adams excelled at school in Cape Town and his artistic abilities were encouraged and supported by his teachers and family. He was denied access to Michaelis School of Fine Art in Cape Town, which was reserved for white students only, so he trained as a teacher and attended part-time art classes at St Peter’s school in District Six with his high-school friend Peter Clarke. Adams was active in antiapartheid student politics until he went to study at the Slade School of Fine Art in London from 1953. After winning a Bavarian State scholarship, he went to Germany to study at the University of Munich and attended summer master classes with Oskar Kokoschka in Salzburg, Austria. One of his most significant works is the triptych South Africa, 1959, now in the Johannesburg Art Gallery, which is sometimes likened to Picasso’s Guernica in its depiction of the horrors of violence and oppression. Adams settled in London after the Sharpeville Massacre in 1960 and in 1979 was appointed to the staff of the City University, London, where he taught for eighteen years.

According to Elza Miles, “the then-young Albert Adams’s ruthless self-examination of ‘utter loneliness verging on depression’ as recorded in his diary when he studied in Munich during 1956 to 1959, is something to note when observing the present lot.”1 In 1958, he painted the portrait of Portrait of an Afghan Student, now housed at the Iziko South African National Gallery, “whose desolateness finds reflection in Portrait of a Boy” possibly produced at a similar time. Miles goes on to question whether Portrait of a Boy (lot 223) is a mirror image of Adams’s boyhood.2 A diary entry on 7 November 1956 notes his feelings about rejection: “I was never accepted as one of the family – least of all by my grandmother… When I was accepted – I was accepted as a stranger”.3

1. Elza Miles, 2022.
2. Ibid.
3. Ibid.

Provenance

Acquired from the artist by the current owner, circa 1990.

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