
Oil on canvas Signed 53 x 106 cm

Oil on canvas Signed 53 x 106 cm

Oil on canvas Signed 53 x 106 cm

Acrylic on canvas 30.5 x 30.5 cm

Acrylic on canvas 30.5 x 30.5 cm

Acrylic on canvas 30.5 x 30.5 cm

Acrylic on canvas 30.5 x 30.5 cm

Acrylic on canvas 30.5 x 30.5 cm

Oil on canvas Signed 53 x 106 cm

Oil on Canvas 47.6 x 48.3 cm

Oil on Canvas 47.6 x 48.3 cm

Gouache on Paper 75 x 55 cm

Gouache on Paper 75 x 55 cm

Gouache on Paper 75 x 55 cm

Gouache on Paper 75 x 55 cm

Acrylic on Canvas 91.4 cm x 61 cm Signed lower right; titled and dated verso; unframed

Acrylic on Canvas 91.4 cm x 61 cm Signed lower right; titled and dated verso; unframed

Acrylic on Canvas 91.4 cm x 61 cm Signed lower right; titled and dated verso; unframed

Acrylic on Canvas 91.4 cm x 61 cm Signed lower right; titled and dated verso; unframed

Acrylic on Canvas 91.4 cm x 61 cm Dated 1996 Signed lower right, Titled and dated verso, Unframed
Northwest Coast
Inuit Sculpture Artist Unknown

Sedna Soapstone

Sedna Soapstone

High Fired Pottery 27.5 cm x 18.7 cm x 18.7 cm

Acrylic Painted Skull 44 cm x 20 cm

Oil on canvas Signed; Numbered 12-06 76 x 58 cm

Oil on canvas Signed; Numbered 12-06 76 x 58 cm

Watercolor Signed Dated 1993 36 x 28cm

Watercolor Signed Dated 1993 36 x 28cm

Watercolor Signed Dated 1993 36 x 28cm

Watercolor Signed Dated 1993 36 x 28cm

Rosewood Tables 78 cm x 150 cm x 54.5 cm

Rosewood Tables 78 cm x 150 cm x 54.5 cm

Rosewood Tables 78 cm x 150 cm x 54.5 cm

Rosewood Tables 78 cm x 150 cm x 54.5 cm

Rosewood Tables 78 cm x 150 cm x 54.5 cm

Oil on canvas 57.2 x 85.5 cm

Oil on Board Signed Dated 1962 90 cm x 65 cm

Oil on Board Signed Dated 1962 90 cm x 65 cm

Coloured pencil on paper 24.1 x 18.4 cm 2015

Sunburst Mixed Media on Board 122.5 x 99 cm

Sunburst Mixed Media on Board 122.5 x 99 cm
Bobbie Burgers
Bobbie Burgers is a contemporary Canadian painter. Her lush and Expressionistic depictions of flowers teeter on the verge of abstraction, bursting with bright color and laden with thickly applied, textural paint. “Flowers, to me, are the opposite of still,” the artist has explained. “Changing from minute to minute, they are perfect symbols for life, death, yearning, and beauty. My brushstrokes are layered with my own internal charges, depicting anger, frustration, softness, wanting, and more.” Born in 1973 in Vancouver, Canada, she studied Art History at the University of Victoria in British Columbia. Her work has been exhibited widely at home and abroad, notably including Art Market San Francisco and Equinox Gallery. Today, her works are in the collections of the Berost Corporation in Toronto and the Royal Bank of Canada, among others. Burgers lives and works in Vancouver, Canada.
Bobbie Burgers
Bobbie Burgers is a contemporary Canadian painter. Her lush and Expressionistic depictions of flowers teeter on the verge of abstraction, bursting with bright color and laden with thickly applied, textural paint. “Flowers, to me, are the opposite of still,” the artist has explained. “Changing from minute to minute, they are perfect symbols for life, death, yearning, and beauty. My brushstrokes are layered with my own internal charges, depicting anger, frustration, softness, wanting, and more.” Born in 1973 in Vancouver, Canada, she studied Art History at the University of Victoria in British Columbia. Her work has been exhibited widely at home and abroad, notably including Art Market San Francisco and Equinox Gallery. Today, her works are in the collections of the Berost Corporation in Toronto and the Royal Bank of Canada, among others. Burgers lives and works in Vancouver, Canada.


Oil on canvas Signed 32 x 39 cm

Oil on canvas Signed 32 x 39 cm

Oil on board 44 cm x 45 cm

Oil on board 44 cm x 45 cm

Oil on Canvas Dated 2012 75 cm x 57cm

Oil on Canvas Dated 2012 75 cm x 57cm

Oil Signed .Titled 88 x 120 cm

Oil Signed .Titled 88 x 120 cm

Mixed Media and Collage on canvas Signed Dated 16 163 cm x 160 cm

Mixed Media and Collage on canvas Signed Dated 16 163 cm x 160 cm

Mixed Media and Collage on canvas Signed Dated 16 163 cm x 160 cm



Oil on canvas Signed 53 x 106 cm

Acrylic on Board Signed 44 cm x 40 cm

Acrylic on Board Signed 44 cm x 40 cm

Colour Pencil on Paper Signed 16 cm x 11 cm

High Fired Pottery 27.5 cm x 18.7 cm x 18.7 cm

Signed Oil 24 cm x 35 cm
Contemporary South African Art
Stopforth, Paul
“Drawing is one way of articulating my relationship to the world.” - Paul Stopworth
Paul Stopforth is a painter and graphic artist who works in oil, gouache, ink, charcoal, metal, encaustic processes and lithography. He was born in 1945 in Johannesburg, South Africa. From the age of 19 he studied at the NATD, Johannesburg College of Art, where he graduated in 1967.
After having lectured in Fine Art at the Natal Technical College in Durban from 1968 to 1971, he was a part-time lecturer in Fine Arts at the University of Pretoria till 1978. That year he returned to Johannesburg and taught painting and drawing at The University of the Witwatersrand for 8 years. In 1977, along Wolf Weineck and Gavin Younge, he founded and the Market Theatre Gallery which he directed for the next seven years.
Inspired by the death of Black Consciousness leader Steve Biko in 1978, the artist created one of his most recognised works of art: The Interrogators. This renowned triptych details the portraits of the security officers who interrogated Biko. Stopforth intended to portray “terribly ordinary-looking” people as the torturers of Biko to represent the commonality in these happenings - what he called the “banality of evil”.
The Interrogators was continued by a series of 20 drawings based on the death of Biko. His works around this time give evidence to a kind of witnessing and testimony in relation to apartheid-era interrogation and torture, and to the deaths in detention to which these practices led (figure 2). They constitute one of the great works of art produced in protest to the apartheid regime. In relation to the struggle, Stopforth remarked, “I want to bring the facts home to those willing to look. My figures parallel something that we can’t be witness to. We can’t refuse to accept that these things happen.”
Stopforth continued to express the situation of politically involved human beings. In 1984, he obtained a British Council Scholarship to study in the United Kingdom. Starting in 1985, he engaged in a one-year postgraduate study at the Royal College of Art in London. Disappointed by the continuous build up of tension and oppression in South Africa and believing nothing would alter the realities of racism and human rights abuses, Stopforth moved to the United States in 1988.
His exile led him to a path of introspection, where he understood the negative influence that the apartheid regime had upon his own life and suffering, a control that was hidden behind the benefits bestowed on white South Africans. It was by leaving the country that he realized that the apartheid regime actively prevented him from confronting his own suffering. He gained perspective and understanding. Now, he reflects, “I engage with history, with memory; I hover between two places, which is a way of forming insight.”
Stopforth became Lecturer on Visual and Environmental Studies and Director of Undergraduate Studies at Harvard University in 1996. He recently retired and is a full time visiting faculty member at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
Stopforth has always maintained interest in South African issues. In 2003 he was invited to Robben Island as a resident artist. There he made works from fragments of various objects and memories on the island, for example Madiba’s blanket and a loudspeaker he found on the island. “The things I found on the island embody the sacrifices made by the men and women who fought against Apartheid,” said Stopforth. This body of work was shown in a group exhibition in November 2006 at the Mandela Gateway in the Western Cape.
Paul Stopforth has been the recipient of various awards amongst which are: the Student Representative Council Award for Best Student in 1967, the Institute of Race Relations Award in 1971, The Rodney Burn Award for Figurative Drawing by the Royal College of Art in 1985, and the Ian Haggie Award for Best Artist in 1986. He has held exhibitions in South Africa, Europe and The United States.
Public collections holding his works include the Harvard Film Archive; the Constitutional Court of South Africa; Tufts University Gallery; the National Gallery, Cape Town; Johannesburg Art Gallery; Durban Art Museum; the Pretoria Art Gallery; and University of the Witwatersrand Art Galleries. He is currently represented by David Krut Projects in New York.
For a complete CV of Paul Stopforth’s education, awards, exhibitions and collections please visit http://www.paulstopforth.com/resume.htm

Pen and Ink Dated 1986 36 cm x 25.5 cm