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Fook Stamps
Walter Battiss
Artwork 1979
Artwork: Walter Battiss, Fook Stamps (1979). Lithograph on paper. Presented under censored name ‘Zook’. Sheet: 25.5 x 24.5 cm (each). Courtesy of Jack Ginsberg. Image courtesy of Sebastian Voigt.
Artist Walter Battiss Title Fook Stamps Date 1979 Materials Lithograph on paper Dimensions Sheet: 25.5 x 24.5 cm (each) Edition Presented under censored name 'Zook' Credit Courtesy of Jack Ginsberg

This artwork was loaned to the exhibition Dada South? Experimentation, Radicalism and Resistance curated by Kathryn Smith and Roger van Wyk, Iziko South Africa National Gallery, December 12, 2009–February 28, 2010. It is indexed here as part of Smith and Van Wyk’s revisiting of the Dada South? Archive of materials at A4 Arts Foundation.

b.1906, KwaNojoli; d.1982, Port Shepstone

Walter Battiss remains an enduringly enigmatic figure in South African art history. He is notable for his inconstant and various mediums – including, among others, watercolour, oils, silkscreen, ceramics, and sculpture – and for the collision of influences in his work. In pursuing a new African modernism, Battiss experimented with such seemingly incongruent styles as Post-Impressionism and Pop Art, paired with formal elements borrowed from San rock paintings, Arabic calligraphy and Ndebele beadwork. While the artist described himself as the “first neo-primitive in South Africa”, others variously classed him a “gentle anarchist,” “amateur anthropologist,” “paunchy painter-poet,” and “wandering nude.” Battiss is remembered today as King Fern of Fook Island, a utopian, sub-tropical destination of his own imagining.

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