A row has erupted over the closure final yr of the Irma Stern Museum (ISM), based in 1971 to rejoice one among South Africa’s best-known artists, amid persevering with uncertainty over when and whether or not it’ll reopen.
Irma Stern (1894-1966), whose work was displayed on the Venice Biennale a number of instances within the Fifties and was the topic of an exhibition at Berlin’s Brücke Museum final yr, is recognised each domestically and internationally. Her mother and father have been German-Jewish however she was born in Transvaal and all through her life travelled extensively, notably to Germany the place she was initially related to the German Expressionist painters of the time.
Having settled in South Africa within the Nineteen Twenties, she moved right into a home referred to as The Firs in Rondebosch, Cape City, and remained there till her loss of life. She left her collections in belief for the encouragement and promotion of artwork: artefacts she had collected, plus her personal artistic endeavors. Some rooms have been saved considerably as they have been when she lived there – most notably her studio along with her paintbrushes, easel, rags and artwork. The gathering was owned by a belief, and the museum was administered by College of Cape City (UCT) on behalf of the trustees.
However in October, the college and the Irma Stern Belief issued a joint assertion saying the tip of their 56-year partnership, which they mentioned paved the way in which for “renewal”. In keeping with the assertion, the collections might be moved to a different storage facility and The Firs “repurposed”.
The museum’s closure the next day triggered outrage: the choice had “left folks indignant and deeply suspicious”, based on Phillippa Duncan, a heritage researcher. “Employees have been faraway from the museum with out readability about their future, the general public was saved at nighttime, and the official announcement got here solely after strain,” she says. “There’s been a whole lack of transparency.”
UCT mentioned on the time that the explanations for the closure have been “operational”, with out giving particulars, and that the cancellation of the settlement and sale of the property was “a matter of disappointment.” Requested to remark additional, a spokesperson says the college was “regrettably not able to remark additional on the matter at this stage. UCT and/or the Irma Stern Belief will situation additional updates as and when mandatory—both collectively or individually—sooner or later.”
After the closure announcement, the chairman of the South African public sale home Strauss & Co, Frank Kilbourn, issued an announcement saying: “We at Strauss & Co, in addition to many Capetonians and artwork lovers the world over, have been shocked and brought aback by latest, surprising bulletins in regards to the closure of the ISM.”
Funds raised for preservation
In 2022 a sale of artwork organised by Strauss raised round 22m Rand (virtually $1.3m) meant for the preservation of the museum.
The belief belongs to a monetary companies firm now referred to as Nedgroup Personal Wealth. Dealing with a public outcry and a petition demanding transparency and accountability, Nedgroup organised a public session in November and afterwards mentioned it might kind a administration committee and advisory board, to be introduced earlier than the tip of 2025 (although, as we went to press, no announcement had been made).
“The relocation of the artworks is beneath method however not but full. It might take a number of months to decommission the museum. The brand new storage facility is within the Nedbank Clocktower Constructing within the V&A Waterfront, Cape City,” the assertion mentioned.
Nedgroup mentioned the proceeds of the 2022 sale had been invested and can be used for managing and sustaining The Firs. “The Irma Stern Assortment and The Firs will proceed in a rejuvenated guise; new exhibition and branding partnerships, and new plans for the way The Firs will dwell on, are all presently developed and might be introduced when the required preparations and agreements are in place,” it mentioned.
Kilbourn, the previous vice-chairperson of the Irma Stern Museum’s committee, says the museum’s trustees and UCT ought to have reached out to a wider public earlier to avoid wasting the museum.
“I imagine the state of affairs requires a renewed effort by Nedbank and the trustees of the Irma Stern Belief to enter right into a dialogue with affected function gamers and leaders within the artwork business to look at the deserves of different methods to take care of the challenges they face,” Kilbourn says.








