Michael Oblowitz (Photographer), Marlene Dumas at Michaelis School of Fine Art, University of Cape Town (South Africa), 1973.
Paul Andriesse (Photographer), Marlene Dumas finishing a portrait of a museum guard, NGBK (Berlin), March 1996.
Marlene Dumas was born in Cape Town, South Africa in 1953, and moved to the Netherlands at the age of twenty-three, where she still lives and works. Recognized as one of Europe’s most successful painters, Dumas has exhibited at top galleries and museums. For Americans who might be less familiar with her work, Gallery 98’s online Dumas exhibition of announcement cards and photographs, spotlights both career highlights and well-known images.
Dumas primarily paints people and explores her multi-faceted subject from every imaginable angle. Her art is about the human condition, and it is about appearances and feelings. She examines every phase of life from pregnancy to death, and she represents every race. She shows people both clothed and naked; sexuality is a frequent theme; and nothing is taboo.
Gallery 98 has recently learned that the 1997 documentary Miss Interpreted (Marlene Dumas) can be viewed on YouTube. Narrated by Dumas, with footage shot in South Africa and Amsterdam, the film has sequences of the the artist at work, interviews with close associates, and captures both a complex artist and her multi-layered work.
Marlene Dumas, The Jewish Nose Doesn’t Exist/The Black Man Is Tired (1990), card, Art Basel 30, 1999
Marlene Dumas, The Jewish Nose Doesn’t Exist/The Black Man Is Tired (1990), card for group exhibition, Paul Andriesse Gallery at Art Basel 30 (Switzerland), 1999. Size: 5 x 4 Inches — Available
YH: Would you say that you are interested in human physiognomy?
MD: Yes, and with the full realization that people have in the past and continue today to abuse this interest—as, for example, the Nazi idealization of a certain physical type of human being, or the standards of physical perfection that modern advertising tries to impose on us. I start with physiognomy, but in the creative process other aspects and issues come into play and become part of the work.
–Gaven Jantjes, Conversations with Marlene Dumas, 1998
Marlene Dumas, Age Indefinite (2003) in the exhibition A Big Dream in a Harsh Reality, folded card, AMC Art Collection (NL), 2004
Marlene Dumas, Age Indefinite (2003), folded card for the exhibition A Big Dream in a Harsh Reality, AMC Brummelkamp Gallery, Amsterdam (NL), 2004. Size: 6 x 8.25 Inches — Available
Dumas works from photographs but freely abstracts her images while she spontaneously reacts to possibilities suggested by her painting process and materials. Her works are emotionally laden; they show beauty but also have a dark side. People seem troubled, haunted, and even threatening, like ghosts and demons.
Marlene Dumas and Anton Corbijn, Stripping Girls, card, Theatermuseum (NL), 2000
Marlene Dumas and Anton Corbijn, Stripping Girls, card, Theatermuseum, Amsterdam (NL), 2000. Size: 6 x 8.25 Inches — Available
This joint exhibition with photographer Anton Corbijn brought both a male and female perspective to the art of striptease. In Dumas’ words, “While in life teasing is experienced as a bad deal flirtation, leaving you angry and frustrated, as an art form it has given us the striptease. You enter the theatre of seduction. You pay for this pleasure to quiver with anticipation. You stick to the rules. Strippers might stretch rules, you don’t. You have to know your place.” Dumas’ paintings were based on her own photographs.
Click to watch the 1997 documentary Miss Interpreted (Marlene Dumas) on Youtube
Promotional postcard for Miss Interpreted (Marlene Dumas), Film by Rudolf Evenhuis and Joost Verhey, MM Produkties,1997. Size: 5.75 x 8.25 Inches — Available
Click here to view Miss Interpreted (Marlene Dumas)
Visit the exhibition Marlene Dumas: Fifty Years of Art Ephemera