Irma Stern (1894-1966)
Irma Stern (1894-1966)
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THE PROPERTY OF A GENTLEMAN, FROM BELMONT HOUSE, SUSSEX
Irma Stern (1894-1966)

Malay Woman

Details
Irma Stern (1894-1966)
Malay Woman
signed and dated 'Irma Stern / 1924' (upper left); signed 'Stern'(?) (under the stretcher) on the reverse
oil on canvas
23 x 17in. (58.4 x 43.2cm.)
There is a study of a Cape Malay street scene on the reverse
Provenance
Rebecca Hourwich Reyher, Robinhood, Maine, by whom acquired directly from the artist in 1925.
Westbrook College, Portland, Maine, by whom acquired from the above in 1976; ownership then passed to the University of New England with the merger of the College with the University in 1996.
Christie's, London, 21 June 2012, lot 409 where purchased by the present owner.
Exhibited
Cape Town, Ashbey's Art Gallery, Exhibition of Modern Art by Miss Irma Stern, February 1925, probably no. 7 (titled 'Lena').
Portland, Maine, Alexander Hall Gallery, Westbrook College, Sinon-Reyher African and Americana Collection, October - November 1978.
Portland, Maine, University of New England, 2009.

Brought to you by

Helena Ingham
Helena Ingham

Lot Essay

Rebecca Hourwich Reyher was an American writer, suffragist and feminist activist who met Stern in Cape Town in 1924 and became one of her earliest champions. Stern asked her to open her Cape Town exhibition in February 1925, on the eve of Reyher's return to New York. The present picture is one of the twenty works Stern shipped out with Reyher to New York, all from the 1925 show, hoping the writer might show and promote her work in America. Reyher's Sterns, all from the second Ashbey's exhibition in 1925, afford a snapshot of Stern in the early to mid-1920s, when she is in her first flourish of work back home on African soil, just as her own voice begins to emerge. Working in the Cape, Natal and Swaziland, Stern is painting sensual and richly coloured African subjects, specifically, as here, the women of the Cape Malay district, the flower sellers on the Parade Ground, and the flowers themselves.

This portrait is probably 'Lena' as mentioned in the Cape Argus review (and as titled on Stern's list of pictures sent to America with Reyher in March): 'Yet one returns again and again to the portraits and native studies. Many will recognise Moscovitch in "The Actor" (14), and there is another portrait "Venetian" (6), which to me carries a face that bears all the terrible impress of a brutal civilisation. What a singular contrast to turn to the subtly attractive face of the native girl, "Lena" (7) ...' Cape Argus, 17 Feb. 1925 'The Modernism of Irma Stern, South African Artist Challenges Attention'.

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