Sunday Times

BIG SPENDER

Looking for an artwork — a big one — for that empty space on your lawn? Here’s where to find it

- www.aspireart.net.

How to get a Kentridge for your lawn

If you live in it long enough, a house becomes a home. A repository for a life’s worth of accumulate­d debris that has sentimenta­l value. Like that ugly ashtray you can’t bring yourself to throw away despite your partner’s protests. Or that incomplete art collection that stopped growing when you had to choose between it and sending your grubby-fingered children to school. What value would you attach to all those memories made tangible? What circumstan­ce would induce you to leave it all behind? Well, in the case of Deodar House, the answers are, hopefully, R15- to R20-million, and charity.

Draped gracefully over a verdant patch of land in Illovo, Johannesbu­rg, the house begins where a portion of the Wanderer’s golf course ends and looks worthy of a visit by the Top Billing crew.

A bevy of large outdoor sculptures by the likes of William Kentridge and Angus Taylor mill around in the front yard and a gravel driveway cascades toward the front door.

The sellers have chosen to remain anonymous. “The family that lived here moved abroad a while ago and decided to sell the house and its contents so that they can donate that to the charity that they are funding,” said Jacqui Carney, an art specialist with Aspire Art, the auction house running the sale.

The five-bedroom house itself has already been sold for an undisclose­d amount but Private Property.co.za has an old listing for it at R30million.

The auction will be split into two parts. The live auction will comprise 104 lots featuring a smaller version of the original Gerhard Marx and William

Kentridge Fire Walker sculpture that lives in downtown Johannesbu­rg, as well as pieces by Dylan Lewis, Willem Boshoff and Edoardo Villa. The works of painters like Irma Stern, John Meyer and Robert Hodgins will also go on the block. There are French and Spanish antique pieces of furniture, as well as items by Paul Smith and Kartell that must go.

The rest of the contents will be sold in a noreserve online auction that will run concurrent­ly with the live auction. Online bidders will also get the chance to pop into the house to view the items they are bidding on during the auction.

“I think the pieces of art and the collection that they have put together, particular­ly the large outdoor pieces, are really the kind of works that would do well at an auction,” Carney said. “They’re not just some ordinary parts of a house that you can sell. They really need some specialist care to make sure they do the best that they can do.”

According to James Sey, marketing manager at Aspire, the auction breaks the mould for how to offload a house and its contents in South Africa

“It is unusual in that there is a really wide range of stuff on offer. From high-end fine art to jewellery, designer furniture and wine,” said Sey.

The general public can stop by and view the house and its contents from Wednesday this week and a number of the artists whose works are part of the auction will be giving talks. The live auction begins at 3pm this Saturday.

‘They’re not just some ordinary parts of a house that you can sell’

 ??  ?? Artworks like this sculpture by Angus Taylor, ‘Sit en Staan’ (Sit and Stand), and William Kentridge and Gerhard Marx’s ’Fire Walker’, below, will be on auction
Artworks like this sculpture by Angus Taylor, ‘Sit en Staan’ (Sit and Stand), and William Kentridge and Gerhard Marx’s ’Fire Walker’, below, will be on auction
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