



for more info contact the gallery via email : gallery@finearts.co.za
or phone them: 044 382 5107
or visit in real life: 6 Long St, Knysna Central, Knysna, 6570
for more info contact the gallery via email : gallery@finearts.co.za
or phone them: 044 382 5107
or visit in real life: 6 Long St, Knysna Central, Knysna, 6570
Dear Family Friends and Patrons,
I have the pleasure to announce that the date for my upcoming solo at Deepest Darkest gallery is set for: 17 April 2021
And the title is: Eucatastrophe!
/ˌjuːkəˈtastrəfi/
NOUN
rare
A sudden and favourable resolution of events in a story; a happy ending.
‘Tolkien called the gospel account the ‘eucatastrophe’, the happiest of all tragedies, because it satisfies the human heart’s deepest yearnings, including the desire for an epic mythology.’
We will send out proper invitations and the catalogue closer to the time. Fingers crossed that we can open to celebrate.
I received some sad news earlier this month.
A dear friend, patron of the arts and one of the first people that collected my work back in 2002 Klaus Stadtmuller has passed away on the 9th of March 2021.
Below is the piece titled “Maria”, which Klaus and Edith acquired for their collection back in 2002. Maria has since then traveled the world with them.
Over the years I have kept contact with Klaus and his partner Edith. They attended my exhibitions whenever they could and it was always a delight to receive word from them, either via email or snail mail for example this letter I received back in 2005 which shows his love interest in the arts from Wopko Jensma to Kurt Schwitters.
In December 2020 I received an email from Klaus after I send him a birthday collage.
He wrote: For some days now I have been working on a little text – yes, about you, a text that I just finished yesterday wanting to send it to you these days. Now the text that, I promise, has not undergone any alterations whatsoever appears to come in return for your generous gift – which it was not meant to be at the outset. In any case, it is now enclosed here for your disposal, also if you want to make use of it for whatever purpose you chose. And feel free to correct any faults that you might find.
Here is the text that Klaus wrote:
Hannalie, Maria &
In old images a decent young lady sits embroidering what might be one of the eye candies to be taken into her imminent marriage. “Yes, I did it myself,” she would tell her admiring lady friends blushing, “yes, it took many hours and quite a few bleeding fingertips, I can assure you.” Nothing substantially has changed since then, you might claim, pointing your finger at Hannalie Taute, who is hell-bent on stitching. But then Hannalie is far from being decent and the embodiment of a primly and modest young lady of times gone by. And, really, she has got a pretty good excuse: she is an artist. That, probably, is the reason why her embroidery is not – as one would expect – on fabric or a similar soft material, but on rubber, yes, that black resistant stuff that normally in an inflated state provides inner automobile tires with high strength and elasticity. A delicate person perforating with a targeted artistic approach a thousand times that ductile, tough material? Quite right.
All of a sudden with incredulous amazement you will realise that there must be a considerable hidden strength with this tender artist. And if that were not enough, against the deceiving appearance this goes along with an underlying hint of horror that you only detect on second sight. Indeed, one wonders where in all of this apparently innocent colourful flowerage such a vicious shrewishness might have its origin. This should be for the artist herself to answer, in actual fact. However, to spot her is not very easy as she regularly hides behind different disguises, none of them corresponding to our conception of a decent young lady with a virtuously lowered gaze. A red-haired vamp, ready to engulf you? A lascivious biker´s chick, a clownish monster, a stern gaping Cinderella or a dangerously overdressed grande dame? A personality as remarkably extravagant as her artistic production. All bets are off, the less anticipated the better. She is constantly reinventing herself and her human repertoire. Humans to the fore – though completely different from all those well-intentioned Sunday painters. With Hannalie, the true everyday artist, the look of the ancestors in the gallery has changed considerably, not to their advantage, but to an alienation that makes them cognizable. Compared to hers the task of Francis Bacon or, in South Africa, Robert Hodgins, Lunga Ntila and Neo Matloga to distort faces to the point of recognizability seems easier, as those artists can effectuate the change with a stroke of a brush or pen respectively by a few cuts with a pair of scissors. Not so if you laboriously try to thread variegated yarns through a refractory piece of rubber. That is exactly what Hannalie Taute does, not in order to build up muscles or to set some sort of a record, but to create remarkable unique pieces of art as her trade mark, literally sticking out of every conventional frame.
We came to know each other many years ago when Hannalie was the invited guest artist at the Klein Karoo Kunstefees. Since then “Maria” has been accompanying us on our travels through different continents. “Maria” is a lady statue app. one meter tall with a long skirt of small greenish perforated metal sheets, a naked plaster-white torso and a bird´s skull as head, a slender and delicate figure that always reminds us of our long standing friendship with the artist. Later on we have seen other pieces of art by Hannalie in a Cape Town gallery, small distorted doll-like figurines attached to the walls. That must have been the next-to-last stage of her unusual art production before she delved into rubber and embroidery from 2012 onward. “Rubber ever after”, citing a title of one of her many shows not only in South Africa (i.e. Knysna, Cape Town, Johannesburg among others) but also in Hobart/Tasmania, recently in Sydney/Australia and earlier at the Museum Rijkswijk in the Netherlands where she represented South Africa in the Textile Biennale.
Other than many of her artist colleagues this petite lady originating from Fochville/Gauteng with a Higher Diploma in Fine Art from the former Port Elizabeth Technikon is also a reader and someone who knows perfectly well to handle and play with words, which is best illustrated by the titles of her exhibitions: “Come Hell or High Water”, “Implanted memories”, “Forward. Forward? Forward”, “Comfortably Numb” or “eat your words” are some of them showing both the intellectual background and a good portion of “Black Humor”, which, by the way, is another title of one of her shows. And yes, her artwork truly appears to be a singular, startling and accomplished cocktail of subtlety and rubber reality, a transition between fairy tale and irony, a mixtum compositum of both philistine Victorian and at the same time a scornful laughter about it, a female fist through the medium of a tambour frame. Thus, really, Hannalie Taute, this up-and-coming artist, after all has nothing in common with the idyllic image of an embroidering bride-to-be. Other than the latter, however, Hannalie tempts us to make up our own stories by means of her wonderfully strange inventions.
Klaus Stadtmuller
What is very interesting to me is that at the time he did not know of this series featuring brides I’ve been working on. How strange the workings of the universe!
I dedicate this “EUCATASTROPHE’ to Klaus Stadtmuller. Rest in peace Klaus!
p.s “The goal isn’t to live forever; the goal is to create something that will.” Chuck Palahnuik Quoted from Diary-a novel
Greetings from this ‘stranger in a strange land’ and it seems to just get stranger by the minute!
As you’ve probably heard, a lot of events have been cancelled due to the pandemic we face. I am in the process of producing work for upcoming exhibitions in April, May, July and August, but with uncertainty breathing down our necks we don’t know if these exhibitions will be cancelled or not.
With that said, Karen Zoid (South African rock singer, songwriter, guitarist, composer, talk show host and patron of the arts) launched an online “Art Auction” on her Facebook page yesterday.
Some of my works (featured here- are included in this ‘online – experiment.)
While I’m not an active Facebook user myself, I am able to send you a link:
You can check out the auction here:
https://www.facebook.com/karenzoidofficial/
The bidding closes today 18 March 2020 at 20h00 – South African time)
The bids started at ZAR19 only! Yes, serious.! Now a lot of people might frown upon this because “what about ‘market price’ and unrealistic bids on the stature of the artist” but this train of thought reminded me about the ‘outsider’ artist Scottie Wilson who
After receiving recognition for his work in Toronto, he abruptly went to London in 1945 and continued to exhibit his drawings for modest fees Wilson’s rejection of commercialism was unabated, however, and he continued to sell his work on the street for a minute fraction of the prices the gallery owners were asking. He said of the working-class customers he attracted, “They’re the intellect, you know”
and
“Though conventional art galleries were taking interest in selling Wilson’s work, he wasn’t always fond of parting with his drawings. He would at times rent out vacant store fronts to display his pictures, or hang them in a bus, but not necessarily to sell. Instead, Wilson would charge admission for looking at his work, challenging anyone to find anything else like it in the world.”
Is it a good idea? Who knows. Nothing seems certain anymore.
In the meantime I baked my first bread from scratch yesterday, and that made me feel very happy. Also I will continue to create embroideries and I plan to spend more time in the garden to grow our own food. Should I be teaching my sons the art of survival instead of worrying about the schools that are closing for a longer period? If push come to shove…should we be prepared to survive like Bear Grylls?
Just asking.
But there are still bills to be paid for now, so the show must go on somehow!
You snooze you loose, but lets hope its not a sneeze 😉 because this might just be a favorable time to start your art collection. ❤
“Support for the arts — merde! A government-supported artist is an incompetent whore!”
―
Here is some advice to the art sector from an art website (*):
To help you continue to sell art during this time, here is a list of things you can do to serve collectors as best you can:
- If you cannot accept shipped artworks at this time, please let us know
- manage collector expectations about shipping times.
Many artists, patrons and art institutions are personally affected by this crisis.
The world needs art more than ever, so in the meantime, collectors are encouraged to continue supporting the art sector. It will keep artists going during these challenging times. We’re so grateful for each of you.
Stay safe and well!
*P.S one gallery that is still up and running is .MContemporary in Australia and they are open for viewing….see previous posts or contact them for a full catalogue!
I am delighted to inform you that I have some recent work available at MContemporary gallery!
Please contact the gallery director Louise Rush at louise@mcontemp.com for a full catalogue.
So as you know the Turbine Art Fair happened over the weekend from 11 – 14 July 2019…and I would like to share my adventures with you:
The adventure started on the 10th of July, flying to Johannesburg with my Mini-me companion. Why is she called Mini-Me you might ask, well…
In preparation for the fair I started to re-read the book: Seven days in the art world by Sarah Thorton, and I quote:
“Poe believes that an art fair can be a tough environment for an artist. ‘ If they are any good, they make art because they have to. They don’t do it to please the market. So for some artists, hanging out here can mess with their heads.”
I wanted to test this theory and check it out for myself.
Anyway, I had my first Gautrain experience where i almost got fined for chewing gum, because in all the excitement I did not notice this sign!
OPENING NIGHT 11/07/2019 (Thursday)
On the opening night I wore a rubber hooped skirt and rubber collar, (envisioned by me, but created with the help from the Tailor: William Mills in Stilbaai.) The headdress I embroidered and made myself. (It used to be the wings of another sculpture that I took apart)
I really love the colour of the wall, which was the idea of the Millennium gallery who represented my work at the fair. I feel it really complimented the work installed.
The opening night was great, and I’ll admit that I felt like some sort of princess at a ball, having a ball 😉 …..(to have a ball. (Enjoy oneself enormously, as in It was a great trip—I had a ball. This idiom uses the noun ball in the sense of “a gala dance.” [ Slang; 1920s])
FRIDAY (open to the public) 12/07/2019
I enjoy dressing up since age 5, and for events like these, i like to wear the medium I make my art with…rubber. So on this day I decided to only wear the rubber crown, but with a rubber collar and some dramatic make-up:
The photo below was taken in the Millennium gallery booth…who also exhibited the work of Norman Catherine (see the artworks behind me). It was an honor for me that my work was exhibited in the same space as his and also with the work by artist Colbert Mashile (whose work was on the opposite wall)
JULY 12, 2019. Hannalie Taute, , at The Millennium Gallery. RMB Turbine Art Fair (RMB TAF) Its the 7th edition of the Fair. “RMB TAF, since its inception in 2013, has grown extensively year on year and 2019 will see the most substantial Fair yet in a new location – 10 Fricker Rd, Illovo from 12 – 14 July with a preview evening on 11 July.” PHOTOGRAPH: ALON SKUY
SATURDAY 13/07/2019
…its time to introduce you to the owner of the Millennium Gallery: Ronel van der Vyfer!
“A great dealer does a good job for the collector but a great job for the artist. A great adviser does a good job for the artist but a great job for the collector.” (another quote from the book: Seven days in the art world.)
SUNDAY 14/07/2019
So on Sunday I wore A blue dress, and fellow artist Zelda Stroud mentioned that outfit reminds her of the “Blourokkies” I was not familiar with this term and she explained it to me, but here is the shortened version found on the internet:
2. colloquial. [Named for the sky-blue uniform of the sect.] A name given to a woman belonging to the Pentecostal ‘Latter Rain’ or ‘Spade Reën’ sect.
[1972 The women..wear a uniform consisting of a sky-blue dress worn well below the knee, with headdress to match…This uniform ensures that they are modestly and neatly dressed, independently of changing fashions.]
1. Prison slang. rare. [Probably by analogy with Afrikaans bloubaadjie the blue jacket worn in the past by long-term male prisoners (see bloubaadjie).] A female habitual criminal, sentenced to an indeterminate period in goal; this sentence. See also blue-coat sense 1.
1969 A. Fugard Boesman & Lena 7 Oppas they don’t get you. Blourokkie next time they catch you stealing.
Highlights of the fair include meeting fascinating people ranging from art students, fellow artists, friends, art lovers young and old and of course interesting art collectors:
“It’s not just about buying a piece. Its about buying into someone’s life and where they are going with it. Its a mutual commitment, which is pretty intense.” – quote from the book: Seven days in the Art World.
One of the interesting art collectors with my work: wild thing. It makes me smile every time I see this image
“Collector should be and earned category. An artist doesn’t become an artist in a day, the same with a collector. It’s a lifetime commitment and a life process.” quoted from the book: Seven days in the art world by Sarah Thornton.
So there you have it dear friends…I would like to thank each and everyone responsible for making this one helluva unforgettable experience!
I’ll leave you with this quote I found on the internet by Tennessee Williams:
“Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?”