Marble Players
Print
1983 (made)
1983 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
Paul Sibisi was born in 1948 at Cato Manor, popularly known as Umkhumbane, in Durban, South Africa. Umkhumbane gained historical fame for its residents’ acts of defiance and resistance to the apartheid government. While initially Sibisi chose to depict everyday scenes of urban life, through linocut and woodcut, from the 1980s he increasingly used these mediums in a politically-engaged way to comment on the inequity of life under apartheid.
This woodcut of 1983 appears at one level a simple, if stylistically bold, depiction of two men playing marbles. Yet the hard stare of the baseball cap-wearing player at his opponent who grasps his wrist as he goes to pick up the marbles, suggests that there is more at stake in this particular game than there might at first appear.
This woodcut of 1983 appears at one level a simple, if stylistically bold, depiction of two men playing marbles. Yet the hard stare of the baseball cap-wearing player at his opponent who grasps his wrist as he goes to pick up the marbles, suggests that there is more at stake in this particular game than there might at first appear.
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Marble Players (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Woodcut on paper |
Brief description | 'Marble Players', woodcut by Paul Sibisi, South Africa, 1983 |
Physical description | Woodcut image of two kneeling men playing marbles. One, with his back to the viewer, grasps the wrist of the second figure who faces us. |
Dimensions |
|
Copy number | 3/25 |
Marks and inscriptions | Signed and dated in pencil 'Paul Sibisi '83', inscribed with title and numbered 3/25. |
Subject depicted | |
Summary | Paul Sibisi was born in 1948 at Cato Manor, popularly known as Umkhumbane, in Durban, South Africa. Umkhumbane gained historical fame for its residents’ acts of defiance and resistance to the apartheid government. While initially Sibisi chose to depict everyday scenes of urban life, through linocut and woodcut, from the 1980s he increasingly used these mediums in a politically-engaged way to comment on the inequity of life under apartheid. This woodcut of 1983 appears at one level a simple, if stylistically bold, depiction of two men playing marbles. Yet the hard stare of the baseball cap-wearing player at his opponent who grasps his wrist as he goes to pick up the marbles, suggests that there is more at stake in this particular game than there might at first appear. |
Bibliographic reference | Eighth British International Print Biennale, Bradford : Corporation Art Gallery, 1984
no.300 |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.634-1985 |
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Record created | December 12, 2007 |
Record URL |
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