Sunday Times

THE FACE WITH A STORY TO TELL

Auction boasts Tretchikof­f portrait of Cape beauty with uniquely South African history

- straussart.co.za Boris Gorelik

T

omorrow Strauss & Co will bring its treasure trove into living rooms across the country so art lovers can bid on valuable pieces from the comfort of their armchairs. The sale will include paintings by well-known 20thcentur­y moderns, including Irma Stern, Walter Battiss, Cecil Skotnes, Maud Sumner, Alexis Preller and JH Pierneef. One of the pieces on offer is Vladimir Tretchikof­f’s 1974 Portrait of Ellen Peters (estimate R900,000 – R1.2m), which has a uniquely South African history:

In 1973, Ellen Peters, a teenage secretary from Kensington, Cape Town, was proclaimed “Newsmaker of the Year” by the Cape Press, Radio and TV Club. To celebrate the occasion she appeared at their ball, a rare multiracia­l event, with other heroes of the day. Among them, mixing with the city mayor, the captain of the provincial rugby team and the queen of South African ballet, was the country’s wealthiest artist, Vladimir Tretchikof­f.

Ellen, in her silver sequinned dress, caught his eye. That year the girl from a coloured suburb won the title of Miss Africa South. It was the non-white equivalent of Miss South Africa. The newly crowned beauty queen represente­d her country at the Miss World pageant and reached the semifinals. She saw London and New York and socialised with Gregory Peck and Engelbert Humperdinc­k.

Tretchikof­f had a multiracia­l ideal of female beauty and was so impressed by Ellen that he asked her to sit for this portrait. Her ancestors came from Scotland, France and Indonesia. Her grandfathe­r was Jewish. Ellen had a very interconti­nental look.

Her portrait by Tretchikof­f belongs to the same tradition as his famous Balinese Girl (1959). It is a view of a Western onlooker admiring female beauty and being fascinated with visual expression­s of Asian culture which complement that beauty.

Sitters for his Balinese portraits, made in the 1950s and onwards, were South Africans of mixed ancestry, like Ellen Peters. This work is set apart from the Balinese series by an absence of accessorie­s: no heavy traditiona­l earrings, no headscarf. Even in Tretchikof­f’s portraits of fruitand-vegetable sellers, the models’ heads are covered. Still, Ellen is clearly a modern girl, with her confident gaze, bold make-up and long hair hanging loose. Her complexion may be bluish, like that of Tretchikof­f’s famous Miss Wong or Chinese Girl, but it was purely an aesthetic choice for the artist. There’s no timelessne­ss in Ellen’s look, no combinatio­n of the archaic and the new that we find in his most popular studies. The girl in this painting is obviously Tretchikof­f’s contempora­ry.

Tretchikof­f’s sitter was confident enough to change her life dramatical­ly in the following years. Ellen met an Israeli businessma­n and converted to Judaism. Her happy marriage lasted three decades. After the death of her husband she returned to Cape Town. Ilana Skolnik-Kazarnovsk­y, as she is known today, is a motivation­al speaker, who has shared her story of spiritual transforma­tion with Jewish women around the world.

The Sunday Times Lifestyle team has launched our official Instagram page with daily postings of features on fashion, art, travel, decor, music, entertainm­ent, popular culture and what’s trending now. Get a taste of what’s coming up in our issues, and be the first to know about online events we’re planning. Follow us on Instagram @sundaytime­s_lifestyle. Also catch the team in their roles as quiz masters in our popular weekly Lifestyle Quiz Night. Visit www.quicklink.co.za/quiznight to register

 ??  ?? Peter Clarke, Harvesters, Teslaarsda­l
Peter Clarke, Harvesters, Teslaarsda­l

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa