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About The Artist

South African artist Tienie Pritchard, one of the most prominent South African sculptors, became internationally renowned for his bronze monumental public commissions. The nine meter high George Harrison in Settler’s Park, Eastgate, Johannesburg is one of the biggest and best-known bronze monuments in the country. The Water Nymphs at the Aventura resort in Bela Bela (Warmbaths) stands six meters tall. The Wall Panel, depicting South Africa’s participation in World War II, in the commemorative museum at Dellville Wood in France, measures an imposing three meters high by ten meters long. His work is represented in private and public collections all over the world. His subject is the human figure, portrayed nude or semi-nude and, although he also sculpts animals, he prefers to incorporate them into his compositions with human figures.
Ever since Tienie had discovered clay as his preferred medium, it was his greatest challenge to sculpt the nude human form. Throughout his career, the nude was his passion and the basis of his creative motivation. To Tienie Pritchard the nude is not only a subject of art, but in fact a separate form of art. The human body is rich in associations and when it is turned into art, it can be expressive of a wide range of concepts. He is convinced that he can capture the human form in three dimensions only by means of the classical realistic style. To him sculpture is all about form. He studied anatomy by assembling the human skeleton and by familiarizing himself with every muscle in the human body.
With his very first public commission in 1972, he followed his heart and sculpted a composition of nude figures representing the human life cycle for the Department of Internal Affairs in Pretoria. Nude sculpture sponsored by the government was unheard of and unacceptable for the conservative section of the South African public during those years. Nudes were deemed detrimental for public morals and inappropriate for public display. This protest catapulted Tienie Pritchard on a controversial but very successful sculpting career.
The challenge to portray man beyond his physical reality initiated Tienie’s interest in ancient cultures and civilizations and inevitably the mythologies of these cultures. His later nudes portray the nude within a cultural milieu and shows how the mind functions within a given cultural background. Tienie honours and illustrates the human imagination.
Primarily known as a sculptor of the nude, Tienie sculpts both male and female. However, he prefers the female form, which is better suited to his smooth polished finishes and subtle modelling technique. Tienie regards the classical Greek sculptors as the greatest masters of realistic sculpture, unsurpassed even in modern times. He is intrigued by the ancient female role of goddess, priestess or sorceress – a phenomenon that vanished in modern times. Other favourite themes are heroic and controversial historical figures (Ndlovunkulu (Shaka), Jeanne D’Arc, Cleopatra, Salome), regality (Shaka, The Royal Hunt, Cleopatra) and the vulnerability of man (Vulnerable, Forsaken, The Five Foolish Virgins, The Marriage Market, Back to the Womb, Search for Wisdom, Despair).
Tienie Pritchard models his sculptures in clay and cast them in plaster of Paris. The plaster cast is worked further to obtain the desired surface for his polished bronze sculptures. Limited editions (not more than 15) are then being cast in bronze.
Tienie always use live models, because he believes that working from live models gives soul to a sculpture. Tienie Pritchard’s bronze art hails the human spirit.
Artist CV
Born on 16 June 1938 in Soekmekaar, Transvaal
Matriculated: Pietersburg
Studies: Pretoria Art School, 1965 - 1967 under the guidance of Eugene Bouffa
Profile: Full time sculptor since 1968
Study Tours:
1983 - USA, England, Italy, France
1984 - Italy, Germany
1985 - Italy
1987 - France
1993 - Zimbabwe
Represented:
Pietersburg Art Gallery
APBCO Collection, Pretoria
References - Books
1. Contemporary Artists of Pretoria - Eric Bolsman
2. The Dictionary of South African Painters and Sculptors - Grania Ogilvie, published by Everard Read
3. Collectors Guide to Art and Artists in South Africa
References - Articles
1. Scope - 05/11/1973
2. Die Brandwag - 19/01/1973
3. Ster - 06/04/1973
4. Foto Rapport - 19/03/1973
5. Die Brandwag - 03/08/1973
6. Foto Rapport - 17/10/1976
7. Articles in numerous newspapers
Exhibitions
1. Solo Exhibition - Lister Art Gallery, 1974
2. Several group exhibitions since 1973 at Lister Art Gallery; Adriaan
Boshoff Gallery, South African Associations of Arts - Pretoria,
Sandton Art Gallery
Presented Internationally
Royal Palace Kuwait
Private collections in South Africa, USA, UK and Australia.
Commissions
1970 Life size family Steenbuck group; SABC Building Pretoria
1972 Life size family group "Life Cycle"; Civitas Building, Dept of Internal Affairs, Pretoria
1972 Relief Panel to depict development of Communication system in SA; on permanent exhibition
1975 Life size nude figure "Tranquility", Benoni Plaza
1979 Life size mining group "Discovery of Gold" Arcade in Pionier Building, Pietersburg
1982 11/2 x life size nude group "Waternimphs", Aventura Resort, Warmbaths
1985 3mx10m Wall panel to depict SA participation in World War II; SA Commemorative Museum, Delville, France
1987 George Harrison; 9m high figure; Settler's Park, Johannesburg
1988 Life size Impala Group; Reception Complex of Skukuza, Kruger National Park
1996 Life size group "Fountain of Wolves"; APBCO Building, Lynnwood, Pretoria
Busts
Piet Joubert - Pietersburg Civic Centre
Johannes Joubert & Johann Rissik - Johannesburg Civic Centre
Bosman - Silverton, Pretoria
Stewart - Bedfordview Primary School, Bedfordview
Schneidemann (portrait in relief) - Operatic and Dramatic Society, Johannesburg
Kallie Den Haas - Aventura Resort, Warmbaths
Eduard Bok - Boksburg Civic Centre
General JBM Hertzog - Press Chamber, Union Buildings, Pretoria
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