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Marlene Dumas (b. 1953)

The Peeping Tom

Details
Marlene Dumas (b. 1953)
The Peeping Tom
signed, titled and dated 'Marlene Dumas, The peeping Tom, 1994' (on the reverse)
oil on canvas
23 x 19in. (59.7 x 49.6cm.)
Painted in 1994
Provenance
Jack Tilton Gallery, New York.
Anon. sale, Christie's London, 24 June 2004, lot 24.
Acquired at the above sale by the present owner.
Exhibited
Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Depletion, Works from the Doron Sebbag Art Collection, ORS Ltd., February-May 2008 (illustrated, p. 94).
Special Notice
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent. VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 17.5% on the buyer's premium.
Sale Room Notice
Please note Provenance should read Anon. sale, Christie's London, 24 June 2004, lot 48.

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Lot Essay

Marlene Dumas's paintings occupy an ambiguous twilight world of suggestion, implication, tension. Nowhere is this more clear than in The Peeping Tom, painted in 1994. In this picture, a naked figure is shown crouching, perhaps looking through a window. The pose of the subject is reminiscent of Degas's celebrated pastel at the National Gallery in London of a woman drying herself, a work that in turn had inspired Francis Bacon, alongside whose works Dumas was herself exhibited at Turin's Castello di Rivoli in 1996. In this way Dumas has invoked several strands from the history of art, introducing a complex game of appropriations which is deliberately muddied by her use of photographic sources in her work. These are sometimes from her own snapshots and archives, and are sometimes found images from magazines. This adds a layer of near anonymity that renders The Peeping Tom all the more potent and mysterious. Is it a part of an overhanging narrative? It appears to be, yet as Dumas herself has pointed out, her art is less narrative than, 'suggestive, it suggests all sorts of narratives, but it doesn't really tell you what's going on at all' (Dumas, quoted in B. Bloom, 'Interview', pp. 7-29, D. van den Boogerd, B. Bloom & M. Casadio, Marlene Dumas, London, 1999, p. 12).

Dumas's picture has a clear erotic aspect. The title heightens the sense that there is something taboo happening here; yet she has also made the viewer complicit in this act. She has placed the entire nature of viewing, of art, of display and of viewing under scrutiny, implying that it may be the artist and the viewer, rather than the subject crouching furtively in the picture, who are the Peeping Toms. However Dumas, in taking that image, embracing it and then rendering it in oils, has granted it a new incarnation. The image itself has taken on a new life, a new existence and a new status through her own intervention: 'When I started to embrace the ambiguity of the image, and accepted the realization that the image can only come to life through the viewer looking at it, and that it takes on meaning through the process of looking, I began to accept painting for what it was' (Dumas, quoted in D. van den Boogerd, 'Survey: Hang-ups and Hangovers in he Work of Marlene Dumas,' pp. 32-85, van den Boogerd, Bloom & Casadio, loc. cit., 1999, p. 37).

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