NICOLA BAILEY, This Dog Watched Beside a Bed
Bronze, 6.5 x 15 x 8 cm
‘My practice engages with ideas of interspecies relationships in the domestic environment, exploring the intimacy and tender nature of companion species and making visible our entangled existence.‘ – Nicola Bailey 2022
A multi-media interdisciplinary artist, Bailey began her art tuition at Ruth Prowse Art College in Cape Town South Africa. Since 2008 she has been part of an art collective founded by artists Rose Shakinovsky and Claire Gavronsky, collectively known as Rosenclaire which is based in both Italy and South Africa. Bailey’s first solo exhibition was held in 2014 at The Culture Gallery at Woodstock Exchange Cape Town, South Africa. In 2020 she held a solo presentation at Everard Read Gallery Cape Town, followed by a solo exhibition at Everard Read in Johannesburg. Selected group exhibitions include Domestic departures at the Forge in Cape
Town in 2011, In Good Company at The Irma Stern Museum in Cape Town in 2013. Art/Out of the Ordinary at the Association of Visual Arts (AVA) in Cape Town. Conversations with Irma at The Irma Stern Museum in 2019 and Seeds of the Fig at he Krone Estate Twee Jonge Gezellen Farm in Tulbagh, South Africa. Living and working in Cape Town, Bailey’s artworks are represented in private collections in South Africa and around the world.
NICOLA BAILEY, Thou Who Lovest Greatly (Mouse)
Bronze, 9 x 12.5 x 10.5 cm
‘My practice engages with ideas of interspecies relationships in the domestic environment, exploring the intimacy and tender nature of companion species and making visible our entangled existence.‘ – Nicola Bailey 2022
A multi-media interdisciplinary artist, Bailey began her art tuition at Ruth Prowse Art College in Cape Town South Africa. Since 2008 she has been part of an art collective founded by artists Rose Shakinovsky and Claire Gavronsky, collectively known as Rosenclaire which is based in both Italy and South Africa. Bailey’s first solo exhibition was held in 2014 at The Culture Gallery at Woodstock Exchange Cape Town, South Africa. In 2020 she held a solo presentation at Everard Read Gallery Cape Town, followed by a solo exhibition at Everard Read in Johannesburg. Selected group exhibitions include Domestic departures at the Forge in Cape
Town in 2011, In Good Company at The Irma Stern Museum in Cape Town in 2013. Art/Out of the Ordinary at the Association of Visual Arts (AVA) in Cape Town. Conversations with Irma at The Irma Stern Museum in 2019 and Seeds of the Fig at he Krone Estate Twee Jonge Gezellen Farm in Tulbagh, South Africa. Living and working in Cape Town, Bailey’s artworks are represented in private collections in South Africa and around the world.
Liza Grobler’s paintings spill over with runaway scribbles and vigorous mark-making, their composition evoking morphing landscapes - perhaps echoing the artist’s own relocation from urban to rural - and the immediacy of their energetic brushstrokes and dribbles of paint harking back to Abstract Expressionism.
In Grobler’s words, “These landscapes are directly related to my recent body of work, Disobedient Landscapes, but the works point - at least in spirit - to the very tactile textures of the Klein Karoo.*
The most valuable lesson I have learnt from the Covid landscape is: 'the only constant is change'. And as I have always been preoccupied with the route, rather than the destination, the uncertainty of the present has brought about a heightened sense of awareness of our actions and environments. It is this quality that I wish to capture - momentous fractions of the present. We became aware of the temporal nature of all our 'securities' and in a sense this is liberating!
The work is also a final curtsy from my urban studio. For the past 20 years, the suburb of Woodstock, Cape Town has been my base camp. In May 2021, my family and I relocated to Oudtshoorn, the capitol of the Klein Karoo. It seems that the emotional shifts in our environment necessitated a physical shift too. This work marks the start of that journey.”
* The Klein Karoo is a semi-desert natural region of South Africa -the southern sibling of the larger Karoo - the Great or Groot Karoo.
Contact: info@everardlondon.com
Image credit: Dan Weill Photography / Artist portrait: Frans Smit
LIZA GROBLER, Spirits of the Klein Karoo
Oil and mixed media on handspun cotton stretched over board, 30 x 30 cm
Liza Grobler’s paintings spill over with runaway scribbles and vigorous mark-making, their composition evoking morphing landscapes - perhaps echoing the artist’s own relocation from urban to rural - and the immediacy of their energetic brushstrokes and dribbles of paint harking back to Abstract Expressionism.
In Grobler’s words, “These landscapes are directly related to my recent body of work, Disobedient Landscapes, but the works point - at least in spirit - to the very tactile textures of the Klein Karoo.*
The most valuable lesson I have learnt from the Covid landscape is: 'the only constant is change'. And as I have always been preoccupied with the route, rather than the destination, the uncertainty of the present has brought about a heightened sense of awareness of our actions and environments. It is this quality that I wish to capture - momentous fractions of the present. We became aware of the temporal nature of all our 'securities' and in a sense this is liberating!
The work is also a final curtsy from my urban studio. For the past 20 years, the suburb of Woodstock, Cape Town has been my base camp. In May 2021, my family and I relocated to Oudtshoorn, the capitol of the Klein Karoo. It seems that the emotional shifts in our environment necessitated a physical shift too. This work marks the start of that journey.”
* The Klein Karoo is a semi-desert natural region of South Africa -the southern sibling of the larger Karoo - the Great or Groot Karoo.
Contact: info@everardlondon.com
Image credit: Dan Weill Photography / Artist portrait: Frans Smit
DYLAN LEWIS, S-H 30 f Beast with Two Backs
Bronze, 17 x 7.5 x 15 cm
Dylan Lewis is Africa’s most internationally renowned living figurative sculptor. Collectively Lewis’ bronzes of felines form perhaps the most powerful commentary on nature and wilderness that has been made by any artist of this era. His cats are far more profound works of art than mere contemporary animalia bronzes. Indeed, they fully interrogate the lithe, almost boneless, grace of these apex predators – creatures that impart by their very presence a palpable tension to any true wilderness.
Lewis’ cats are imbued with a unique dense energy by an artist who, through a lifetime of immersing himself in pristine natural environments, somehow contrives to elevate his sculpture into a homage not only to the singular animals but indeed to their ancient lineages. Lewis’ bronzes fully capture the essence of an organism perfectly adapted to its habitat – the bodily expression of DNA adapting to eons of inexorable environmental change. In the presence of his art, it does not take long
to be affected by the rare brilliance and self-confident virtuosity honed by decades of work both in nature and his studio.
Whilst his cat sculptures have attracted collectors’ attention, Lewis has gradually shifted vision and focus onto the human figure. Elements of humanity began to be hinted at in some early sculptures in the artists development. A growing body of recent work featuring highly charged emotional and erotic human forms now dominate much of this fascinating sculptor’s artistic output.
Lewis’ sculpture has been avidly collected internationally for decades and this has resulted in two auctions at Christies being wholly dedicated Lewis’ bronzes.
Dylan Lewis lives in Stellenbosch, South Africa. He has developed a unique sculpture garden where some of his most celebrated bronzes may be viewed within the natural environment that intellectually nourishes their maker.
NIGEL MULLINS, Touch Here to Overcome Anti-Utopian Forces, 2016
OIL ON SUPERWOOD AND FRAME, 53 x 43 cm
NIGEL MULLINS, Protect You from Extraordinary Calamities of the Future
Oil on superwood and frame, 84 x 45 cm
NIGEL MULLINS, Bring Back Lost Love (London Olympics 1908), 2016
Oil and copper wire on superwood, 40 x 38 cm
NIGEL MULLINS, Heroic Prosperity (Homage to Lorraine and Griff Mullins), 2015
OIL ON SUPERWOOD, WIRE AND ANTIQUE FRAME, 75 x 100 cm (29 1/2 x 39 5/16 in.)
DANIEL NAUDÉ, Africanis 3. Strydenburg, 1 April 2008 (Africanis)
C-Print, Lightjet on Fujifilm professional paper, Dibonded on aluminium, 74 x 74 cm
DANIEL NAUDÉ, Africanis dog. Murraysburg, South Africa, 7 February 2009
Archival pigment print on hahnemuehle cotton rag 308 gsm paper, 24 x 24 cm
Cornwall based sculptor William Peers’ organic forms in Carrara or Portuguese marble are a celebration of form and shape which echo the recurring patterns in nature. They emerge from periods of intensive carving and then sanding to hone and shape their sinuous curves. In this exhibition Peers’ sculptures are offset by bespoke black Tunisian marble bases.
Contact: info@everardlondon.com
Acclaimed South African artist, Lionel Smit is best known for his contemporary portraiture executed through monumental canvases and sculptures. Now 40, Smit has been sculpting since he was a child, spending his days in and around his sculptor father’s studio.
Smit’s sculptures are often highly textured like this one, entitled Surge, where the hand - and tools - of the artist are clearly evident in the finished bronze.
Smit is both a painter and sculptor and has explored on canvas, paper and here in clay a version of the Janus head but Smit instead creates a double portrait, one face looking skywards and the other looking towards the earth. A simple yet powerful metaphor for life.
RINA STUTZER, Stealing the Little Hole in the Sky
Cast Bronze, Copper, Patina, 12.5 x 10 x 10 cm
Rina Stutzer’s work is elusive; in a constant process of becoming, the pieces evolving out of each other, often guided by intuitive impulses. She is drawn to making works that are not fixed; whose identity is ambiguous (as with the crow) and transitory, provisional (as with the nomad). All we know of the world is that we are passing through it and the the works in this exhibition poignantly telegraph the impermanence of all things.
“Stutzer uses crows in her work as a metaphor for human beings and their place in the world. We are reminded of Ted Hughes’s crow poems – where the corvid is infinitely adaptable, unpredictable, inexhaustible, and capable of mischief. Here the crow also stands for the artist herself: both operate outside of society, both are subversive, and both are tricksters playing with the possibilities of reality.
The tent is a recurring image in her work and here Stutzer’s structure is made of delicate and ephemeral twigs - a temporary dwelling, not unlike our own skins, that we inhabit during our journey through the world. “The tent is explicitly yonic in many of Stutzer’s works; we are reminded of the emergence of humanity into the world, the birth of a child – the human spirit moving from womb to world, belonging in neither, only ever visiting both.” - Miranthe Staden Garbett
Stutzer’s female form in “corpse pose” is between life and death, in a state of transition between different realms, impossible to pin down.
Contact: info@everardlondon.com
Image credit: Carla Crafford / Dan Weill Photography
RINA STUTZER, In the Praise of the Nomadic: Rhizome
Bronze, Patina, Marble, 18 x 23.5 x 29 cm
Rina Stutzer’s work is elusive; in a constant process of becoming, the pieces evolving out of each other, often guided by intuitive impulses. She is drawn to making works that are not fixed; whose identity is ambiguous (as with the crow) and transitory, provisional (as with the nomad). All we know of the world is that we are passing through it and the the works in this exhibition poignantly telegraph the impermanence of all things.
“Stutzer uses crows in her work as a metaphor for human beings and their place in the world. We are reminded of Ted Hughes’s crow poems – where the corvid is infinitely adaptable, unpredictable, inexhaustible, and capable of mischief. Here the crow also stands for the artist herself: both operate outside of society, both are subversive, and both are tricksters playing with the possibilities of reality.
The tent is a recurring image in her work and here Stutzer’s structure is made of delicate and ephemeral twigs - a temporary dwelling, not unlike our own skins, that we inhabit during our journey through the world. “The tent is explicitly yonic in many of Stutzer’s works; we are reminded of the emergence of humanity into the world, the birth of a child – the human spirit moving from womb to world, belonging in neither, only ever visiting both.” - Miranthe Staden Garbett
Stutzer’s female form in “corpse pose” is between life and death, in a state of transition between different realms, impossible to pin down.
Contact: info@everardlondon.com
Image credit: Carla Crafford / Dan Weill Photography
RINA STUTZER, The Little Collector V
Bronze, Iron pyrite crystal (Fools Gold), Patina, 6 x 4 x 6 cm
SHANY VAN DEN BERG, A Short Fable
pencil, ink, watercolour and collage on vintage paper, 38 x 28 cm
SHANY VAN DEN BERG, Antheia - Godess of the Garden
Pencil, charcoal and oil on board, 130 x 130 cm
BARBARA WILDENBOER, The Blind Leading the Blind I
Handcut rephotographed analogue collage, 24 cm
BARBARA WILDENBOER, The Blind Leading the Blind VI
Handcut rephotographed analogue collage, 36 cm
BARBARA WILDENBOER, The Blind Leading the Blind VIII
Handcut rephotographed analogue collage, 30 cm
BARBARA WILDENBOER, The Blind Leading the Blind III
Handcut rephotographed analogue collage, 36 cm
BARBARA WILDENBOER, The Blind Leading the Blind IX
Handcut rephotographed analogue collage, 30 cm
BARBARA WILDENBOER, The Blind Leading the Blind VII
Handcut rephotographed analogue collage, 42 cm
BARBARA WILDENBOER, The Blind Leading the Blind II
Handcut rephotographed analogue collage, 30 cm
BARBARA WILDENBOER, The Blind Leading the Blind V
Handcut rephotographed analogue collage, 42 cm
BARBARA WILDENBOER, The Blind Leading the Blind IV
Handcut rephotographed analogue collage, 36 cm
Specialists in contemporary art from South Africa. Established in 1913. South African artists are part of the global conversation. We seek to make their voices heard.