Sculpture

Description

This sculpture is the last known sculpture by artist Ernest Mancoba. He carved it out of a single wood block, leaving traces of his chisel on the diminutive, vaguely lifelike form. The sculpture seems to reflect both the artist’s early exposure to small Christian icons—such as crosses and rosaries brought by missionaries—and South African devotional sculpture, which reflect a blend of Christian and Indigenous influences. Although critics viewed Mancoba’s “little wooden images” as evidence of his “strong African origins,” for Mancoba it was not geography that mattered, but the shared lineage with artists who could reconcile the spiritual and the material.

Provenance

Ove (1911-1986) and Grethe-Inge (1925-2007) Wrem, Roskilde, Denmark, probably acquired directly from the artist; by descent to Kirsten Wrem, Roksilde, Denmark, 1987; sold to Galerie Mikael Andersen, Copenhagen by 2000 [email from Christian Andersen to David Brodie, August 26, 2020, copy in curatorial file]; sold to Jens Olesens, Copenhagen, by 2000 [email from Christian Andersen to Jay Dandy, March 18, 2020, copy in curatorial file]; sold through Michael Stevenson Fine Arts, Cape Town, to the Art Institute of Chicago, September 15, 2020.

Sculpture

Ernest Mancoba

1951

Accession Number

255263

Medium

Wood

Dimensions

31 × 10.7 × 13.2 cm (12 1/4 × 4 1/4 × 5 1/4 in.)

Classification

sculpture

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Ada Turnbull Hertle endowment and Barry Sullivan funds