Cape Argus

Da Vinci of Ravensmead has an eye for faces

- ANÉL LEWIS

BOASTING a discerning eye, UWC audiovisua­l technician Oscar Linnert, 50, says he dreams of a space where he can be himself with his artworks and creativity.

Linnert, from Ravensmead, has worked at the university’s audiovisua­l department for the past decade, producing numerous portraits and commission­s, including portraits of UWC former rector and vice-chancellor Brian O’Connell and Nelson Mandela.

He said, for him, art has been a lifelong occupation.

“If you asked my mother, she will say that I started sketching before I could even speak.

“Of course I don’t remember that, but I know that I’ve been sketching all my life and that it became normal to sketch people’s faces,” says Linnert.

He found portraits the most challengin­g, saying that he could gauge a person’s age, or life story, by the folds of their skin, or their eyes.

Linnert said one of his most challengin­g projects was a sketch of identical twins, completed while he was still at high school.

“I managed to highlight the difference­s between them in the sketch,” much to the delight of the teacher who had commission­ed the artwork, he said.

With no formal artistic training – except for a year at Peninsula Technikon studying graphic design – Linnert has dabbled in various media over the years.

He spent a few years doing signwritin­g, using a brush to replicate graffiti-style effects.

He also made “a buck or two” doing artwork in letters.

When this became boring, he moved on to three-dimensiona­l art using polystyren­e. It was a 3D commission for a computer company that exposed him to the “editing world” of special effects and digital graphics, and opened the door to his current day job at UWC.

While grateful for the steady income, Linnert admitted that it sometimes felt as if his body was screaming inside by the time he got home, as he just wanted time to paint in his driveway.

His art has become a family endeavour, especially during lockdown. Linnert said his children enjoyed touching up his artworks and it was a way for them to spend quality time together. His daughter is also a dab hand with the paintbrush, following in her father’s footsteps.

Although oil is his preferred medium, Linnert would like the opportunit­y to experiment with latex and steel. He hopes to complete a rendering of Mandela using this medium in the future. But for now, he’s happy to be painting in his driveway, creating the portraits that have earned him his reputation as Ravensmead’s “Leonardo da Vinci”.

 ??  ?? OSCAR Linnert with UWC’s former rector and vice-chancellor, Brian O’Connell.
OSCAR Linnert with UWC’s former rector and vice-chancellor, Brian O’Connell.

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