Thomas Bowler

Near Salt River - Truter’s Mills (recto); preliminarly sketch (verso)

About the Session

Dubbed the Cinderella Province, the Eastern Cape has long been a fertile creative hub for nascent poets, playwrights, musicians, painters, sculptors, photographers and craftspeople. It has had an established fine art community stemming from its 1820 Settler beginnings which list illustrious national names like Thomas Baines, Frederick I’ons and Thomas Bowler who visually documented the frontier landscape, flora and colonial life in the Western painting tradition.

After the Second World War, teaching intuitions like Rhodes University, The Port Elizabeth Art School (subsequently the PE Technikon – now the Nelson Mandela University) and Fort Hare University were largely staffed with British teachers who brought with them the traditions of the Royal Academy. Influential artists like Dorothy Kay, Betsy Fordyce, Joan Wright, Fred Page, Stuart Titcombe and Herbert McWilliams all belonged to the Eastern Province Society of Arts and Crafts (EPSAC), a cultural society which was a forum and meeting place for artists, music lovers and theatre goers. McWilliams was associated with the development and art education of Black South Africans at both Fort Hare and Lovedale, institutions which mentored artists like George Pemba and Gerard Sekoto.  In 1956 an Arts Hall (King George VI Art Gallery) was opened which later became the Nelson Mandela Metropolitan Art Museum. The Museum’s comprehensive holdings include an unrivalled specialist collection of traditional Xhosa beadwork and specialist collection Chinese artifacts which reflect the immigrant community’s early existence and presence in the city. There are also major permanent holdings which include the Keiskamma Art Project Tapestry which is a visual portrayal of the AmaXhosa history of the Eastern Cape and Hillary Grahams’ SS Mendi paintings which document the forgotten role of Black African soldiers in WW1. The Grahamstown Group, the GAP Group and many regional artists like Fred Page, Walter Battiss, Norman Catherine, Alexander and Marianne Podlashuc, Hunter and Ruth Nesbit, Neil Rodger, Penny Siopis, Brian Bradshaw, Josua Nell, and Lynnley Watson all form part of the Museum’s local provenance. Today, the Museum has a progressive outreach programme which is defining cultural change.

There also have been many unknown artists of calibre like Jennifer Ord, Ethna Frankenveld and Tim Hopwood who have seldom exhibited outside the Province. Most artists who have either incubated or developed their skills -  like Phil Kolbe, Anne Marais, Meshak Masuku, Anton Momberg, Hylton Nel, Obie Oberholzer, Brent Meistre, TJ Lemon, Christine Dixie, Vusi Khumalo (at Dakawa), Beth Armstrong, Andile Dyalvane (in collaboration with Zizipho Poswa), and textile designer Laduma Ngxokolo - have had to move away to more cosmopolitan centres to gain wider exposure for their work.

Jeanne Wright


Current Bid

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Lot 603
  • Thomas Bowler; Near Salt River - Truter’s Mills (recto); preliminarly sketch (verso)
  • Thomas Bowler; Near Salt River - Truter’s Mills (recto); preliminarly sketch (verso)
  • Thomas Bowler; Near Salt River - Truter’s Mills (recto); preliminarly sketch (verso)


Lot Estimate Change Currency
ZAR 8 000 - 12 000
Current Bid
Bid now to get first bidder discount
Starting at ZAR 8 000
Location
Cape Town
Shipping
Condition Report
May include additional detailed images
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About this Item

South African 1812-1869
Near Salt River - Truter’s Mills (recto); preliminarly sketch (verso)

signed and inscribed indistinctly with the title

watercolour with heightening in China White on toned paper
16 by 24cm excluding frame; 37,5 by 44,5 by 3cm including frame

Notes

The present lot hails from a recently deaccessioned private corporate collection - the world's second-largest collection of Bowler's work, only surpassed by the William Fehr collection at Iziko.

After arriving in Cape Town in 1834, Thomas Bowler spent his career documenting the Cape Colony. He painted both its landscapes and the lives of its inhabitants. His work also captures the early development of Port Elizabeth and scenes from his travels during a period of conflict between the Dutch and the British as they expanded into territories defended by the indigenous population.

With the assistance of Dr Mathys Bokhorst from the National Gallery and Bradlow, the company secured additional works by Bowler. Bradlow then took on the role of curator for the collection in 1967. Through his efforts, it became the country's second-largest holding of Bowler's art, surpassed only by the William Fehr collection at the Iziko Museums, encompassing paintings and other objects from the 17th to 19th centuries.

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