Ending 27th Jul, 2021 19:40

Aspire X PLP | African Photography Auction 2021

 
Lot 39
 
Lot 39 - T. J. Lemon (South Africa 1959-)

39

T. J. Lemon (South Africa 1959-)
Izintombi (from the Homecoming celebrations ('uKhisimus'), esiPongweni series)

ink print on Ilford Gold Fibre Gloss cotton paper

Artwork date: 1992
Signature details: signed and inscribed with the title on the reverse
Edition: number 1 from an edition of 10

Sold for R10,000
Estimated at R15,000 - R20,000


 

ink print on Ilford Gold Fibre Gloss cotton paper

Artwork date: 1992
Signature details: signed and inscribed with the title on the reverse
Edition: number 1 from an edition of 10

(1)

image size: 28 x 38 cm; sheet size: 30 x 40 cm unframed

TJ Lemon began his career in photography in the 1980s as a student covering events at the small university town of Makhanda (then Grahamstown) in the Eastern Cape, South Africa. Lemon was a lecturer in Photojournalism at Rhodes University from 1988–1989. He had three exhibitions in Makhanda before moving to Johannesburg in 1990, where he was appointed as director and trainer at the newly formed Market Photo Workshop. Lemon was also a contributor to the photographers’ collective Afrapix.

After the 1994 elections, he took a staffer position at Independent Newspapers and became chief photographer of The Sunday Independent. He pursued news and feature work as required but enjoyed the versatility a weekly publication offered. Lemon began writing for his picture features and went on to win a World Press Photo award (2001) for his photo-essay, Oswenka, the Jeppe Hostel Swankers.

In 2010, he left Independent Newspapers to pursue freelance work and longterm photographic projects. Lemon taught in the Journalism department, Wits University, from 2013–2015. He collaborated with Louise Meintjes from Duke University on the book, Dust of the Zulu: Ngoma Aesthetics after Apartheid (2017), and an exhibition in Durham (2018). His exhibition, Comrades, Warriors and Volkstaat Kommandos, was shown at the National Arts Festival in Makhanda (2019).

In this work, Izintombi prepare for the celebrations of a coming-of-age NOTES ritual (umemulo); esiPongweni, Keates Drift, KwaZulu-Natal.

LIVE AUCTION:

If this is a Live Auction you have several methods in which to place your bids.

Please see https://www.aspireart.net/buying/ for more information on bidding in a Live auction.

 

TIMED-ONLINE AUCTION:

If this is a Timed-Online auction - all bidding takes place right here. 

Once logged in, simply enter your maximum bid.

An email will be sent to you if you are winning, if the reserve is not met, or if you are outbid.

As well as receiving emails, you will see the status of your bids on the website with a 'flash' showing your current bid status; you can also view this information on your 'My Account' page.

 

IMPORTANT NOTICE:

Max bid

You can leave a maximum bid by entering the maximum amount that you wish to bid up to on a particular lot. In doing so, the bidding system will automatically and incrementally bid on your behalf, up to your maximum bid amount in the event that you are outbid by another auction registrant.

When you are outbid, the bidding system will automatically bid one increment above the latest winning bid to ensure that you are the winning bidder and will do so until your maximum amount is reached.

Once you are no longer the winning bidder, it means that your maximum bid amount has been outbid by another registrant.

When you are not the winning bidder, but your maximum bid amount is the same as the current winning bid, it means that you were outbid by another registrant whose maximum bidding amount either matches or exceeds your maximum bid amount and that the winning bidder placed their absentee bid prior to yours.

NB: The system gives sequential preference to bidders based on when they first entered their bid into the bidding system.

Auction: Aspire X PLP | African Photography Auction 2021, ending 27th Jul, 2021

The sale, presented in partnership with the Photography Legacy Project (PLP) was the largest collection of African photography ever to come to auction.

Notable inclusions were works by Zimbabwean photographer Tamary Kudita and young award-winning woman photographer, Lee-Ann Olwage who collaborated with Belinda Qaqamba Kafassie. Emerging photographers like Kongo Astronauts collective (DRC) and the documentary imagery of Etinosa Yvonne (Nigeria) added depth and diversity, while the older generation of established practitioners like David Goldblatt, Alf Kumalo and Ernest Cole also featured.

View all lots in this sale

Images *

Drag and drop .jpg images here to upload, or click here to select images.



 

Currency conversions are based on the exchange rate at the auction's start time and date. Bidders should verify the current exchange rate on the day of the sale. All invoices and payments must be made in South African Rands.

 

IMPORTANT NOTICE:


 

Logistics

While we endeavour to assist our Clients as much as possible, we require artwork(s) to be delivered and/or collected from our premises by the Client. In instances where a Client is unable to deliver or collect artwork(s), Aspire staff is available to assist in this process by outsourcing the services to one of our preferred Service Providers. The cost for this will be for the Client’s account, with an additional Handling Fee of 15% charged on top of the Service Provider’s invoice.

Aspire Art provides inter-company transfer services for its Clients between Johannesburg and Cape Town branches. These are based on the size of the artwork(s), and charged as follows:

Small (≤60x90x10 cm): R480

Medium (≤90x120x15 cm): R960

Large (≤120x150x20 cm): R1,440

Over-size: Special quote

 

Should artwork(s) be collected or delivered to/from Clients by Aspire Art directly, the following charges will apply:

Collection/delivery ≤20km: R400

Collection/delivery 20km>R800≤50km

Collection/delivery >50km: Special quote

 

Packaging

A flat fee of R100 will be added to the invoice for packaging of unframed works on paper.

 


International Collectors Shipping Package

For collectors based outside South Africa who purchase regularly from Aspire Art’s auctions in South Africa, it does not make sense to ship artworks individually or per auction and pay shipping every time you buy another work. Consequently, we have developed a special collectors’ shipping package to assist in reducing shipping costs and the constant demands of logistics arrangements.

For buyers from outside South Africa, we will keep the artworks you have purchased in storage during the year and then ship all the works you have acquired during the year together, so the shipping costs are reduced. At the end of the annual period, we will source various quotes to get you the best price, and ship all your artworks to your desired address at once.

Aspire Art will arrange suitable storage during, and cost-effective shipping at the end, of the annual period.

 


Collections

Collections are by appointment, with 24-hours’ notice

Clients are requested to contact the relevant office and inform Aspire Art of which artwork(s) they would like to collect, and allow a 24-hour window for Aspire Art’s logistics department to retrieve the artwork(s) and prepare them for collection.

 


Handling Fee

Aspire Art charges a 15% Handling Fee on all Logistics, Framing, Restoration and Conservation arranged by Aspire.