William Kentridge (b. 1955)
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William Kentridge (b. 1955)

Sleeper Series (Krut p. 66-69)

Details
William Kentridge (b. 1955)
Sleeper Series (Krut p. 66-69)
four etchings with aquatint and drypoint, 1997, including Sleeper I, Sleeper and Ubu, Sleeper Black and Sleeper Red, on Arches wove paper, Sleeper I signed in pencil, numbered 30/30, the others signed with white crayon, numbered 50/50 (Krut records that only 30 of Sleeper and Ubu were actually completed), published by David Krut Projects, Johannesburg and New York, the full sheets, deckle edges below, in excellent condition
P., S. 974 x 1927 mm. (and similar) (4)
Literature
William Kentridge Prints, David Krut Publishing, Johannesburg and New York, 2006, p. 66-69.
Special Notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 17.5% on the buyer's premium.

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Lot Essay

In 1996 Kentridge embarked on a series of etchings to coincide with the centenary of Alfred Jarry's Ubu Roi. In Ubu tells the Truth Kentridge transposed Jarry's spiral bellied comic anti-hero with the figure of a naked man based on photographs of Kentridge performing the part of Ubu in his studio. The series was the basis for a theatre production written and directed by the artist, Ubu & the Truth Commission (1997), which in turn was the genesis of The Sleeper prints. 'I had worked on a series of messy drawings of a naked man, sometimes enclosed by the white Ubu line drawing, trying to get some feel of the theatre production in them. With the first set of drypoints I had used a thumbprint and printed the heel of my hand to suggest the flesh texture. With the large drawings one has to pull shape and texture into the drawing on a larger scale. I wheeled a bicycle across the paper, hit it with charcoal-impregnated silk rope, invited children and cats to walk over it, spattered it freely with pigment. The Sleeper prints used a range of materials and objects placed on soft ground to try to effect the same damage upon the paper'. (William Kentridge, in: William Kentridge Prints, David Krut Publishing, Johannesburg and New York, 2006, p. 66)

This is the first time that the complete series has been offered at auction.

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