ANNE SASSOON
b. 1943, Wales, UK
Sassoon’s life has been spent in England, Wales, South Africa, the United States and Israel. The sense of isolation, exile and displacement of those living on the margins is a thread that runs through her highly theatrical and expressive style. But it is the politics of apartheid South Africa which formed her methodology and critique.
Anne Sassoon sat in the court room when Steve Biko, Breyten Breytenbach and protesting Soweto students were prosecuted by apartheid judges. She witnessed the prosecution of her husband, Benjamin Pogrund, who was tried for exposing cruel prison conditions. During these notorious trials, Anne sketched surreptitiously.
Politics and theatre in apartheid times were linked. Names such as Athol Fugard and Barney Simon are recognized as the drivers of anti-apartheid theatre. Sassoon notes that ‘My first job was painting sets in a theatre, and later, when director Barney Simon opened the Market Theatre, I would often do drawings at rehearsals, and made the set for his production of ‘Volpone’.
Together with Barney Simon and the photographer David Goldblatt, she curated an exhibition of portraits from small photographic studios in Diagonal Street, Johannesburg. Photos that were not collected by the clients were thrown away. She remembers that the three of them discovered that they were each collecting discarded prints.
Sassoon says ‘This collection has accompanied me around the world and remains alive and precious to me. People – black migrants, young tsotsis (the word for young hooligans in SA), women stripped to their underwear and lying on a rug as if on a glamorous beach, pose and act out imaginary roles with props – a dummy telephone or vase of plastic flowers, in front of a makeshift curtain, creating their own theatre’
It is hardly surprising that the politics and aesthetic of theatre infuse her canvases. Her post-apartheid paintings often explore the concept of The Twin and The Doppelgänger. She says, ‘these doubles frequently appear in my work: they animate each other and I think of the characters as if they are acting something out onstage.’ Her art is theatrical and has elements of Brechtian theatre and Weimar cabaret.
Sassoon and Pogrund were forced to leave South Africa in 1986. Sassoon became a Londoner. This was a loss. She missed the support she had enjoyed sharing process with South African artists. Now, assessing her London period, she sees that ‘the story went indoors and became grey. Instead of pink-skinned sunbathers gaping into the glare and black servants with white gloves, I had couples bumping up against each other yet somehow unconnected, with armchairs and unruly pot plants adding to the claustrophobia – domestic dramas. I did drawings on the Tube and fashioned my interiors from Ikea catalogues.’
In Jerusalem, Sassoon collected images of the stencil graffiti that appeared on backstreet walls about ten years ago. She says, ‘They were very small and people hardly noticed them, but the characters had an emotive quality that I responded to without really understanding, and I sometimes bring them into my paintings.’
Sassoon writes, ‘The double narrative intensified and became more specifically male. I referred to the two boy Panchen Lamas: the Tibetan who was kidnapped by the Chinese and the Chinese boy who replaced him. The narrative merged into the Biblical brothers, Isaac and Ishmael, whose roles were switched in the Koran. Whether they echo or confront each other, two characters set up a visual dynamic, and I like to keep the composition moving like a kind of vaudeville dance.’
Her work has been seen at The Barbican, London, in Berlin, South Africa and Jerusalem. On this site, a gallery of her paintings celebrates the vast output of an original Sephardi artist whose images hints at the elements we unearth in Discovering and Documenting England’s Lost Jews – loss, marginalisation, secrecy, duality, performance, protest, joie de vivre and survival. A major contemporary artist of Sephardi heritage, Sassoon is an important voice.
“I try to catch something of human vulnerability in my work, and the theatre of human relationship. Politics comes into it, looking like a vaudeville act or tentative dance between characters; also onlookers who watch and wait for events happening offstage. I draw from life and memory, including Youtube as a source for life drawing, and my own experience that can resonate from apartheid days or reflect news from today’s TV.” Anne Sassoon
SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS
2019
Dualities, Jerusalem Biennial, Israel
2016
Travel-stained, Great Park Centre, Johannesburg, South Africa
Characters Who Fly In Through The Door, Artspace, Jerusalem, Israel
2014
Points of Departure, Artists’ House, Jerusalem, Israel
2013
Exiles, Artspace, Jerusalem, Israel
2010
Ghost Memory, Jozi Art Lab, Johannesburg, South Africa
2010
36 Views of Lion’s Head, These Four Walls, Cape Town, South Africa
2008/9
Galerie Leo.Coppi, Berlin, Germany
2004
Eating etc, Yakar Gallery, Jerusalem, Israel
2001
Gallery Westland Place, London, UK
2001
Isaac/Ishmael, Artspace, Jerusalem, Israel
2000
Lighthouse Gallery, Jaffa, Israel
1998
Goodman Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1996
College of the Atlantic, Maine, USA
1994
Coffee Gallery, London, UK
1980
Helen de Leeuw Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1978
Market Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1970
Gallery 101, Johannesburg, South Africa
1971
Gallery 101, Johannesburg, South Africa
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS
2022
IX Tashkent International Biennale of Contemporary Art
2017
Jerusalem Biennial, Israel
2016
Insider/Outsider Reflections, David Krut Projects, South Africa
2010
Irma Stern Museum, Cape Town, South Africa
2010
Art on Paper, Kalk Bay Modern, Cape Town, South Africa
Angaza, Greatmore Studios, Cape Town, South Africa
2008
Becoming: Visions of Childhood, Bronfman Center, New York
Personal Space, Public Views, Yakar Gallery, Jerusalem, Israel
2007
Drawing Biennial, Artists’ House, Jerusalem, Israel
Equal and Less Equal, Museum On The Seam, Jerusalem
2006
Beyond Graffiti, Bronfman Center, New York, USA
2005
Dislocated Landscape, Yakar Gallery
2004
Rishumim, Artists’ House, Jerusalem, Israel
2004
Self-portraits by 36 Israeli artists, Yakar Gallery
2001
Traces – Contemporary Drawing in Israel, Artists’ House, Jerusalem
1998
Dealing with Conflict, Houston, USA
1997
Munich Art Fair, Germany
1996
Rubies and Rebels, Barbican Gallery, London, UK
1996
Boundary Gallery, London, UK
1990
Six South African Painters, Sternberg Centre, London, UK
1988
Thumb Gallery, Bath Festival, UK
1985
Cape Town Triennial, South Africa
1985
Tributaries, SA and Germany
1985
Women Artists, Market Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1984
Figurative Painters, Market Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
1983
Sassoon, Hodgins & Bell, Carriagehouse Gallery, Johannesburg, South Africa
PUBLIC COLLECTIONS
Chelsea & Westminster Hospital, London
Middlesex University, London
BBC YourArt, London
Johannesburg Art Gallery
South African Constitutional Court, Johannesburg
Durban Art Gallery, South Africa
Wits Art Museum, Johannesburg
SASOL Art Collection, South Africa
Oliewenhuis Art Museum, Bloemfontein, South Africa
Museum on the Seam, Jerusalem
Mentor at Turps Banana Painting School, London 2020 –
Art writer for Artcritical, NY, Jerusalem Report, Rand Daily Mail, SA, and others
Curator and participated in themed exhibitions at Yakar Gallery, 1997 – 2012
With thanks to Everard Read Gallery, London