Auction started | 1 August 2024 8:00 am |
LOT 1: John Ndevasia Muafangejo (1943 – 1987) Death of a Chief: Mandume
Lino cut print on paper signed and numbered 25/100 in pencil. size 38cm x 42cm – Framed size 53 x 56cm
Estimate: R9 000 – R1500
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From: | To: | Increment: |
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ZAR 0 | ZAR 1900 | ZAR 100 |
ZAR 2000 | ZAR 4800 | ZAR 200 |
ZAR 5000 | ZAR 9500 | ZAR 500 |
ZAR 10000 | ZAR 19000 | ZAR 1000 |
ZAR 20000 | ZAR 48000 | ZAR 2000 |
ZAR 50000 | ZAR 95000 | ZAR 5000 |
ZAR 100000 | ZAR 490000 | ZAR 10000 |
ZAR 500000 | ZAR 980000 | ZAR 20000 |
ZAR 1000000+ | ZAR 50000 |
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ABOUT THE ARTIST
John Ndevasia Muafangejo (5 October 1943 – 27 November 1987) was a Namibian artist who became internationally known as a maker of woodcut prints. He created linocuts, woodcuts and etchings.
Biography
Muafangejo was born in Etunda lo Nghadi, Angola in 1943. He came from the people of Kwanyama (Kuanjama), who inhabit the northern parts of Ovamboland. As a child, he tended cattle barefoot. In 1955 his father died, leaving his mother, who was one of eight wives, with no assets. His mother converted to Christianity and moved in 1956 to the Anglican mission station in Epinga which lay south of the border in Namibia. In 1957 John followed her there and attended the local missionary school.
At twenty Muafangejo moved to the Holy Cross School of Mission in Onamunhama, then to the St Mary’s School in Odibo. He stayed there until 1967. An American missionary named C. S. Mallory supported his artistic talent and helped him with the application to the Arts and Craft Centre of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Rorke’s Drift, Natal in South Africa. The Rorke’s Drift Art and Craft Centre was founded in 1962 by the Swedish couple Ulla and Peder Gowenius and played a significant role in the development of South African art in the second half of the 20th century. Here Muafangejo came into contact with different artistic techniques, such as the weaving, woodcarving, painting and pottery. One of his teachers was Azaria Mbatha (b. 1941). He distinguished himself particularly in etching and linocut. In 1968 he suffered a nervous breakdown and was in treatment in the Madadeni Hospital in Newcastle due to a severe depression. After his release he acquired a degree from Rorke’s Drift in 1969. From 1970 to the end of 1974 he worked as an art teacher at the mission school in Odibo. In 1974 he was awarded the Artist-in-residence scholarship in Rorke’s Drift. In 1975 he returned to Odibo, and in 1977 moved to Windhoek. During 1986–1987 he built a house in the suburb of Katutura.[1] He died suddenly of a heart attack in Katutura Township, Windhoek on 27 November 1987.
Works
Muafangejo is considered one of the most important visual artists of his generation.[citation needed] His linocuts are powerful depictions of people and events, expressed in black and white imagery, condensing the colourful landscapes and animal images of Namibia’s artists of European origin.
He often combines text with images, and his images contain references to the history and culture of the ovaKwanyama. He did not live to see the independence of Namibia, but the violent struggle for it formed the background for his art.[2]
Muafangejo’s output contains only ca. 260 different prints. The Namibian Arts Association in Windhoek has a large collection of his works in their Permanent Collection.