Prints by Nicolaas Maritz

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P R I NT S N I C O L A A S M A R IT Z



P R I NT S An album of selected digital works made between 2011 - 2018

NICOLAAS MARITZ Nemesia*Press_online DARLING 2018


CONTENTS Introduction Black and white ‘lino prints’ Colour ‘lino prints’ Biography



INTRODUCTION Life is a battle between faith and reason in which each feeds upon the other, drawing sustenance from it and destroying it. Reinhold Niebuhr But I believe above all that I wanted to build the palace of my memory, because my memory is my only homeland. Anselm Kiefer People don't remember each tree in a park but all of us benefit from the trees. And in a way, artists are like trees in a park. Yoko Ono My introduction to lino printing was at home in Pretoria, when my mother hand printed some Matisse-like amoebic designs on cloth, for the upholstery of square angle-iron banquettes. These were produced for the office of my parents’ first architectural practice in the Netherlands Bank Building in Pretoria. This must have been about 1963. Black and white lino prints form the Rorkes Drift Swedish Mission Station in Natal, especially the works of Azaria Mbatha, the



ubiquitous woodcuts of J.H. Pierneef, and playfully rude Walter Battiss silkscreens, were much in evidence on the walls of my family, and on those of my parents’ artistic and architectural circle of friends. There was even a messy lino print lesson during a 1967 school art period. The Education Department printing ink was extremely sticky, and only came in a virulent green, and a ‘provincial works department’ dirty brown. Most unsatisfactory. The sixties were after all the time of the permissive ‘graphic’, the edgy silkscreen and the bold poster. My mother made herself A-line dresses out of very colourful fabric with bold graphic designs from the Pretoria shop of Helen De Leeuw, often screen printed by Kerstin Wasserthal. Everyone loved it. We thought it was so ‘fab’. Art, like morality, consists in drawing the line somewhere. Gilbert K. Chesterton Lino prints appeal to my sense of definitive edge, line and shape. It has a clarity, a crispness that I appreciate still.


During my high school years in Port Elizabeth I discovered the fascinating lino and woodcut prints of Fred Page and Alexander Podlashuc. The art school of the Technical College at Russell Road had a particularly strong graphics department, which made it’s visual influence felt with numerous exhibitions, and with many prints on the walls of private homes. I was rather keen on prints then. My first solo exhibition in 1976 in Port Elizabeth was of monotypes, lino prints and silk screens. I am against the idea of the end, that everything culminates in p a ra d is e or judgment. Anselm K i ef e r I still love printmaking. Nowadays I produce a version of lino print which I have named faux lino prints. Though made on computer, they may well appear to be anachronistic, which is a piece of subterfuge I currently like to perpetrate. I fail to see why art made now should necessarily have a ‘modern look’? Nicolaas Maritz Darling 2018



BLACK AND WHITE “LINO PRINTS”

Art is to me the glorification of the human spirit, and as such it is the cultural documentation of the time in which it is produced. Hans Hofmann


Cannon Balls, 2013


Dishy Fish, 2013


Black Sun Snake, 2013


Avocado Still Life with Starling, 2012


Kalkrand View (First Version), 2011

Kalkrand View with Bustard with Clouds, 2012



Double Bustard View, 2015


Karoo Rockscape, 2011


Dam with Clouds, 2011

Double Moon Fox Terrier, 2015



Swartland Spinster Sisters, 2014


Rugby Chums, 2015


Mantis Mangoes, 2016


Histamine Head, 2015


Modern Madam, 2014


Inspired Guess, 2015


Sightseeing Tourists, 2015


A Too Long Day, 2016


Pricked Sausage, 2015


Bottled Fury, 2015


Macaroni Monster, 2013


Carved Creature, 2013


Summer Fruit, 2014


Spotted Pears, 2014


Garden Pear, 2013


Mango Bowl, 2013


Lonely Night Pear, 2014


Scientifical Bug, 2014



Kalahari Thorn, 2015

Slangbult Farm, 2016


Italian Vegetables, 2014


French Fruit Tableaux, 2015


West Coast Mermafrodite, 2016


Gulper, 2015


The Last West Coast Lion, 2014


Aesthetical Impasse, 2015


Sacrificial Bull, 2014


Casual Observer, 2014


Inveterate Night Owl, 2016


Cape Designer Type, 2017


Self Portrait with Long Hair, 2017


Gecko Face, 2016


Bi-polar Lizard Maiden, 2016


Fish-brained Inventor, 2016



COLOUR ‘LINO PRINTS’

The lord chisels still, so don't leave your bench for long. Gilbert & George


Egg and Doll Dream, 2013


In the Garden at Night, 2013


Lemon and Snake Beach, 2013


Two Karoo Creatures, 2014


Saucer of Milk, 2012


Canary Morning, 2016


Insect Youth, 2013


Phallic Pearls, 2017


Hornbill Evening, 2013

Two Moon Fontein, 2014




Thabazimbi ThornTree (sketch), 2013

Thabazimbi Afternoon, 2014


Crocodile River Landscape, 2014


Two Moon Farm, 2014


Pink Adder Country, 2014


Two Pink Moon Parties, 2015


Two Moon Bar Fly, 2014


Bushveld Two Moon Red Snake Dream, 2014


Saturday Morning Moons, 2014


Biting the Leguan by it’s Tail, 2014


Pink Fruit Bowl, 2017


Yellow Egg Bowl, 2017


Brave Young Creature, 2017


Middle Aged Creature, 2017


Golden Hills, 2012


Pink Hills, 2012


Blue Hills, 2012


Black Hills, 2012


Red Earth, 2012


Pink Table Two Moon Mountain, 2012


Pink Table Bay, 2012


Pink Sky Table Bay, 2012


Love Bug, 2012


Red Ant, 2012


Self Portrait, 2014


Mayonnaise Malherbe, 2014


Red Trees with Black Bustard, 2014

Red Thorn Trees with Two Moons, 2014



Four Ancestral Spectators, 2014


Two Moon and Third Eye Bird, 2014


Two Ancestral Apparitions, 2014

Five Ancestral Apparitions with Two Moons and Plover, 2014



Pink Anniversary Skull, 2015


Golden Prospects Skull, 2015


Diversion Tactics I, 2014


Diversion Tactics II, 2014


Careful Mask Construction, 2016


Benign Masked Behaviour, 2016


Dispersive Mask, 2016


Playful Masked Behaviour, 2016


Optimistic Youth, 2016


Ancestral Figurine, 2016


Two Jolly Polly’s, 2017


Sixties Child, 2016


Three Pinkish Ancestral Apparitions, 2016


Three Mute Ancestral Apparitions, 2016


Two Energetic Nuclear Apologists, 2016


A Marriage of Convenience, 2016


Three Cultural Observers, 2016


Three Old Friends on A Sunday, 2016


Two Lagoon Lovers, 2015


Pollen Morning, 2016


Double Vision Charlie, 2016


Head, 2016


Self Portrait as a Younger Man, 2016


Cumbersome Creature, 2016


Laurie, 2016


Steven, 2016


Two Fooky Friends, 2015


Two Fookian Creatures, 2015


Two Fooky Figurines, 2015


Mutual Embarrassment, 2015


Bi-polar Lizard Maiden (Light Blue Version), 2016


Bi-polar Lizard Maiden (Red and Green Version), 2016


Tutti Frutti Coloured Personnage, 2016


Fish-brained Inventor (Coloured Version), 2016


Red and Black Portrait, 2016


Green Lizard Face, 2016


Self Portrait with New Haircut, 2015


Twin Purple Ectoplasms, 2015


Two Gardening Friends, 2016


Palsy Portrait, 2016


Two Figures Lost in Their Wigs, 2016


Mutual Congratulators, 2016


Two Obscurantists, 2015


Four Fertility Figures, 2015


Autumnal Garden, 2015


Dandelion Garden, 2015


Whistle as you work, 2016


Fruity Platter, 2017


Lizard Fruits, 2017


Feline Hygiene, 2018


Ceramic Enthusiast I, 2014

Ceramic Enthusiast II, 2014



Ceramic Affair, 2014


Two Bearded Creatures, 2015


Red Roman with Lemon and Knife, 2017


Golden Skull View, 2017


Fish in a Blue Bowl, 2016


Pink Fish on a Yellow Plate, 2016


Twee vars Harders vanaf Velddrif, 2016


Pink and Blue Fishy, 2016


BIOGRAPHY Nicolaas Maritz (born 9 July 1959) is a South African multimedia artist. His artistic roots are deeply embedded in the Southern African landscape. Drawing inspiration from its shapes and colours, its creatures and its sounds, he has, during his long career, created a unique body of work, instantly recognizable by virtue of the idiosyncrasy of his vision and the immediacy of the manner in which it is realized. Curious juxtapositions – of the real and the fantastical, the natural and the artificial, the simple and the complex, the humorous and the sinister – are a defining characteristic of Maritz’s art. Many writers have commented on this aspect of his work, and on the creative friction generated by this interplay of contradictory elements, which extends also to his stylistic usage and artistic aims. In describing his paintings, Hilary Prendini-Toffoli writes, “though deceptively naive, in a retro technique evocative of the ‘30s and ‘40s, these multi-levelled paintings manage at the same time to be both meaningful and decorative.” Maritz was born into an artistic Pretoria family, his father an architect and his mother a ceramic artist. Early influences which


were to inform his work, were derived from his parents, his Namibian grandmother, and two artistic Pretoria aunts. Their architectural designs and drawings, watercolours, graphic work, ceramics and illustrations inspired the young Maritz, and helped to form his precocious artistic sensibility, long before he reached art school at the University of Cape Town in 1978. Maritz is a prolific artist, but seems to possess an almost boundless ability to reinvent his aesthetic approach. He is particularly known for his paintings of the Southern African landscape, especially for his singular portrayals of Table Mountain, but his extensive oeuvre is by no means limited to this genre. It includes a large body of paintings, as well as drawings and prints, with excursions into graphic design, ceramics, sculpture, digital and other media. In recent years his approach has been to re-cycle some of his past works in ‘traditional‘ media, through digital collage and montage techniques, to create contemporary and cryptic fusion forms, featuring digital drawing and manipulation, layered sound, and video.



https://sites.google.com/site/nicolaasmaritzgallery/


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