Lot

505

Lady Anne Barnard (British 1750-1825) KHOI WOMAN provenance and artist's name

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Lady Anne Barnard (British 1750-1825) KHOI WOMAN provenance and artist's name
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Cape Town
Lady Anne Barnard (British 1750-1825) KHOI WOMAN provenance and artist's name inscribed on the reverse watercolour on paper 20,5 by 16,5cmIt is with great pride that Stephan Welz & Co debuts two important and exquisitely executed water colours by Lady Anne Barnard from her momentous visit to the Cape of Good Hope during the First British Occupation (1795-1801). Rarely on the market, these works are accompanied by unique documentary provenance and have been in the possession of the descendants of Lady Anne Barnard from 1966. They are offered for the first time with a handwritten letter from Lady Anne Barnard to Henry Dundas in 1801.The two watercolours give us a rare glimpse into the lives of individual women from the underclasses of the Cape Colony at the end of the 18thcentury. In ground-breaking new research, historian Tracey Randle has traced the origins and possible identities of the subjects depicted in Lots  505 and 506. Her article is included in this special focus on Lady Anne Barnard.The aristocratic Anne Lindsay was a leading figure of the Scottish Enlightenment, and the most prolific letter writer, diarist and recorder of any woman of the age. Well connected and witty she was sought after as a sparkling presence in the salons of Georgian society. Her circle included the illustrious presence of The Prince of Wales, Samuel Johnson, Edmund Burke, Henry Dundas, Joshua Reynolds and Thomas Gainsborough among others. Her independence was considered scandalous at the time, and eventually in her early forties she capitulated by marrying beneath her in both age and class. Twelve years her junior, her new husband Andrew Barnard – whom she lovingly nurtured and encouraged – secured a prestigious post as Colonial Secretary of the Cape of Good Hope in 1797. Acting as the first lady of the Cape Colony, Lady Anne Barnard’s African adventures and achievements became legendry. Almost two centuries after her death her legacy continues to make an impact.Anne was raised by a noble and free thinking father, The Earl of Crawford and Balcarres in a secluded castle on the coast of Fife, Scotland. James Lindsay married a woman forty years his junior, and at the advanced age of sixty, welcomed Anne into the world as the first of eleven children. Sadly, Anne found her mother to be remote – worn down by the burden of child bearing – yet it was her affectionate and bookish father who encouraged her intellectual curiosity and creative gifts.  Favoured with beautiful looks, the youthful Anne rejected at least twelve proposals of marriage and the continuous – and unsolicited – advances of older predatory men. It has been suggested [1]that Anne may not have been able to bear children as the result of a sexually transmitted disease, incurable at the time. However, this did not deter her maternal feelings, and possibly motivated her empathetic and compassionate concerns, an attitude generally absent from other contemporary accounts of life at the Cape of Good Hope at the turn of the 19thcentury.Lady Anne was a prolific recorder of life at the Cape – in letters (one of which is on [i]sale), diaries and of course her acclaimed visual record of sketches, drawings and watercolours as well as a few rare oils. She differed from contemporary colonial male artists, in that her work was produced without future publication or official sanction in mind. Her drawings were personal and intimate capturing scenes from the domestic and social life was part of at the time. Drawings were quickly sketched at the dinner table, from her quarters at the Castle, in a carriage oren plein air. She was unusually curious about the wellbeing and origins of the servants and slaves around her. In this way her watercolours of people reveal an empathy absent from the work of other recorders – such as her neighbour at the Castle, Samuel Daniel.The famous image of the so-called Black Madonnaexists in two very similar preparatory sketched versions[ii] of the completed coloured watercolour  on offer. The identity of the young Indian slave recorded as Theresaby the artist, is depicted in a maternal scene nursing her master van Reenen’s lastborn child. Tracey Randall in her article, has identified the child as the baby of the van Reenen family of Ganzekraal farm, near Darling, Cape.  The tenderness of this portrait is underscored by the artist’s comments that she was able to capture the sleeping infant and young nurse in a leisurely manner as they dozed off [2]The second maternal portrait Mother and childdepicts a self-confident and smiling mother gazing directly at the viewer. Dressed in the regal sheep skin cloak and beaded adornment of a Khoi chieftainess, she was sketched at Ganzekraal on the same day in 1799 asBlack Madonna. This was recorded by Lady Anne in her diaries and subsequently highlighted by Tracey Randall.[iii]The full-length miniature vignettedepicts a joyful infant on the shoulders of her mother reaching for a dried gourd rattle, set against a distant landscape, reminiscent of the West Cape coast.These exquisite renderings now take their place amongst a small groups of works on paper selected for a local South African[iv]audience from Lady Anne Barnard’s profuse archive.  Originally part of the Bibliotheca Lindesianaheld by the Earls of Crawford and Balcarres in their stately home, the archive has recently been transferred to the National Library of Edinburgh in Scotland.The arresting watercolours of life at the Cape and her adventurous journeys to the interior have never been published nor publicly exhibited in compliance with Lady Anne Barnard’s express wishes.  The significance and value of these exceptionally rare and re-discovered images is invaluable to a new reading of the South African past.CAROL KAUFMANN[1]TAYLOR, STEPHEN, DEFIANCE THE LIFE AND CHOICES OF LADY ANNE BARNARD.2016.FABER &FABER, LONDON.[2]SEE BARKER, NICOLAS. LADY ANNE BARNARD’S WATERCOLOURS AND SKETCHES: GLIMPSES OF THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. FERNWOOD PRESS. 2009.[I]ONE SMALL OIL PAINTING IN PARTICULAR STANDS OUT AS IT IS A SELF-PORTRAIT OF HER BATHING AU NATURELAT HER BELOVED PARADISE, PRESENTLY HOUSED IN THE WILLIAM FEHR COLLECTION AT THE CASTLE OF GOOD HOPE IN CAPE TOWN.[II]IN THE IZIKO SOCIAL HISTORY COLLECTIONS AND THE BALCARRES COLLECTION[III]WE ARE MOST GRATEFUL TO TRACEY RANDALL (PHD CANDIDATE) FOR ALLOWING US TO PUBLISH HER GROUND- BREAKING RESEARCH IN THIS CATALOGUE.[IV]SEVEN PORTRAITS ANNOTATED WITH THE NAMES OF LOCAL INDIVIDUALS WERE PRESENTED IN 1972 TO THE SOUTH AFRICAN CULTURAL HISTORY MUSEUM (NOW THE IZIKO SOCIAL HISTORY COLLECTION).PROVENANCEBy descent. A letter gifting the works accompanies the watercolour of The Black Madonna.ACKNOWLEDGMENTSOur gratitude is due to Tracey Randall ( PHD Candidate), Ariadne Petoussis  (The Vineyard) , Esther Esmyol (iziko Social History Collections), Melanie Geustyn ( Special Collections, South African Library)  and others for  their inspirational information, ideas  and assistance with the presentation of Lady Anne Barnard’s  watercolours.
Lady Anne Barnard (British 1750-1825) KHOI WOMAN provenance and artist's name inscribed on the reverse watercolour on paper 20,5 by 16,5cmIt is with great pride that Stephan Welz & Co debuts two important and exquisitely executed water colours by Lady Anne Barnard from her momentous visit to the Cape of Good Hope during the First British Occupation (1795-1801). Rarely on the market, these works are accompanied by unique documentary provenance and have been in the possession of the descendants of Lady Anne Barnard from 1966. They are offered for the first time with a handwritten letter from Lady Anne Barnard to Henry Dundas in 1801.The two watercolours give us a rare glimpse into the lives of individual women from the underclasses of the Cape Colony at the end of the 18thcentury. In ground-breaking new research, historian Tracey Randle has traced the origins and possible identities of the subjects depicted in Lots  505 and 506. Her article is included in this special focus on Lady Anne Barnard.The aristocratic Anne Lindsay was a leading figure of the Scottish Enlightenment, and the most prolific letter writer, diarist and recorder of any woman of the age. Well connected and witty she was sought after as a sparkling presence in the salons of Georgian society. Her circle included the illustrious presence of The Prince of Wales, Samuel Johnson, Edmund Burke, Henry Dundas, Joshua Reynolds and Thomas Gainsborough among others. Her independence was considered scandalous at the time, and eventually in her early forties she capitulated by marrying beneath her in both age and class. Twelve years her junior, her new husband Andrew Barnard – whom she lovingly nurtured and encouraged – secured a prestigious post as Colonial Secretary of the Cape of Good Hope in 1797. Acting as the first lady of the Cape Colony, Lady Anne Barnard’s African adventures and achievements became legendry. Almost two centuries after her death her legacy continues to make an impact.Anne was raised by a noble and free thinking father, The Earl of Crawford and Balcarres in a secluded castle on the coast of Fife, Scotland. James Lindsay married a woman forty years his junior, and at the advanced age of sixty, welcomed Anne into the world as the first of eleven children. Sadly, Anne found her mother to be remote – worn down by the burden of child bearing – yet it was her affectionate and bookish father who encouraged her intellectual curiosity and creative gifts.  Favoured with beautiful looks, the youthful Anne rejected at least twelve proposals of marriage and the continuous – and unsolicited – advances of older predatory men. It has been suggested [1]that Anne may not have been able to bear children as the result of a sexually transmitted disease, incurable at the time. However, this did not deter her maternal feelings, and possibly motivated her empathetic and compassionate concerns, an attitude generally absent from other contemporary accounts of life at the Cape of Good Hope at the turn of the 19thcentury.Lady Anne was a prolific recorder of life at the Cape – in letters (one of which is on [i]sale), diaries and of course her acclaimed visual record of sketches, drawings and watercolours as well as a few rare oils. She differed from contemporary colonial male artists, in that her work was produced without future publication or official sanction in mind. Her drawings were personal and intimate capturing scenes from the domestic and social life was part of at the time. Drawings were quickly sketched at the dinner table, from her quarters at the Castle, in a carriage oren plein air. She was unusually curious about the wellbeing and origins of the servants and slaves around her. In this way her watercolours of people reveal an empathy absent from the work of other recorders – such as her neighbour at the Castle, Samuel Daniel.The famous image of the so-called Black Madonnaexists in two very similar preparatory sketched versions[ii] of the completed coloured watercolour  on offer. The identity of the young Indian slave recorded as Theresaby the artist, is depicted in a maternal scene nursing her master van Reenen’s lastborn child. Tracey Randall in her article, has identified the child as the baby of the van Reenen family of Ganzekraal farm, near Darling, Cape.  The tenderness of this portrait is underscored by the artist’s comments that she was able to capture the sleeping infant and young nurse in a leisurely manner as they dozed off [2]The second maternal portrait Mother and childdepicts a self-confident and smiling mother gazing directly at the viewer. Dressed in the regal sheep skin cloak and beaded adornment of a Khoi chieftainess, she was sketched at Ganzekraal on the same day in 1799 asBlack Madonna. This was recorded by Lady Anne in her diaries and subsequently highlighted by Tracey Randall.[iii]The full-length miniature vignettedepicts a joyful infant on the shoulders of her mother reaching for a dried gourd rattle, set against a distant landscape, reminiscent of the West Cape coast.These exquisite renderings now take their place amongst a small groups of works on paper selected for a local South African[iv]audience from Lady Anne Barnard’s profuse archive.  Originally part of the Bibliotheca Lindesianaheld by the Earls of Crawford and Balcarres in their stately home, the archive has recently been transferred to the National Library of Edinburgh in Scotland.The arresting watercolours of life at the Cape and her adventurous journeys to the interior have never been published nor publicly exhibited in compliance with Lady Anne Barnard’s express wishes.  The significance and value of these exceptionally rare and re-discovered images is invaluable to a new reading of the South African past.CAROL KAUFMANN[1]TAYLOR, STEPHEN, DEFIANCE THE LIFE AND CHOICES OF LADY ANNE BARNARD.2016.FABER &FABER, LONDON.[2]SEE BARKER, NICOLAS. LADY ANNE BARNARD’S WATERCOLOURS AND SKETCHES: GLIMPSES OF THE CAPE OF GOOD HOPE. FERNWOOD PRESS. 2009.[I]ONE SMALL OIL PAINTING IN PARTICULAR STANDS OUT AS IT IS A SELF-PORTRAIT OF HER BATHING AU NATURELAT HER BELOVED PARADISE, PRESENTLY HOUSED IN THE WILLIAM FEHR COLLECTION AT THE CASTLE OF GOOD HOPE IN CAPE TOWN.[II]IN THE IZIKO SOCIAL HISTORY COLLECTIONS AND THE BALCARRES COLLECTION[III]WE ARE MOST GRATEFUL TO TRACEY RANDALL (PHD CANDIDATE) FOR ALLOWING US TO PUBLISH HER GROUND- BREAKING RESEARCH IN THIS CATALOGUE.[IV]SEVEN PORTRAITS ANNOTATED WITH THE NAMES OF LOCAL INDIVIDUALS WERE PRESENTED IN 1972 TO THE SOUTH AFRICAN CULTURAL HISTORY MUSEUM (NOW THE IZIKO SOCIAL HISTORY COLLECTION).PROVENANCEBy descent. A letter gifting the works accompanies the watercolour of The Black Madonna.ACKNOWLEDGMENTSOur gratitude is due to Tracey Randall ( PHD Candidate), Ariadne Petoussis  (The Vineyard) , Esther Esmyol (iziko Social History Collections), Melanie Geustyn ( Special Collections, South African Library)  and others for  their inspirational information, ideas  and assistance with the presentation of Lady Anne Barnard’s  watercolours.

Stephan Welz & Co. | Fine Art & Design Auction | 1 & 2 July

Sale Date(s)
Lots: 1 - 120
Lots: 121 - 300
Lots: 301 - 460
Lots: 421 - 520
Lots: 521 - 639
Venue Address
The Old Mutual Conference Centre
Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens
Rhodes Drive
Newlands
Cape Town
7700
South Africa

For Stephan Welz & Co delivery information please telephone +27217946461.

Important Information

Stephan Welz & Co | Fine Art & Design Auction

 1 & 2 July 2019 | Cape Town

 

The Old Mutual Conference Centre

Kirstenbosch Botanical Gardens

Rhodes Drive

Newlands

Cape Town

7700

 

Session 1 

Monday | 1 July| 10am

Lots 1 - 120

Carpets & Rugs, Coins, Books & Maps, Furniture

 

Session 2

Monday | 1 July | 2pm

Lots 121 - 300

Decorative Art, Silverware

 

Session 3

Monday | 1 July | 4pm

Lots 301 - 460

African Art, Fine Art

 

Session 4

Monday | 1 July | 7pm

Lots 461 - 650 

Furniture, African Art, Fine Art

 

Session 5

Tuesday | 2 July | 10am

Lots 651 - 830

Clocks, Pocket & Wristwatches, Jewellery, Handbags

 

 

PREVIEW

28, 29 & 30 June 2019 | 10am - 5pm

Walkabout conducted by Anton Welz, Saturday 29 June, 11am 

Jewellery, Watches, Coins and Silverware viewing will close at 4:30pm each viewing day 

 

Buyer’s premium is calculated at 14% plus VAT at the prevailing rate for items selling at or above R10 000 and 17% plus VAT for items selling below R10 000 . 

Shipping Costs between our Cape town AND Johannesburg offices

The packing and transport costs will be calculated as follows (one bulk shipment between offices):

Shipping bewteen our Cape Town and Johannesburg offices will be for the buyers accountand must be paid prior to the goods leaving Cape Town 

Insurance is not included

This catalogue may be referred to as (SA1905) - KAURI

  

 

Terms & Conditions

TERMS & CONDITIONS OF BUSINESS AND RULES OF AUCTION

Swelz (Pty) Ltd Trading as Stephan Welz & Co., (“The Company”)

The Company carries on its business as auctioneers in accordance with these Terms and Conditions of Business and Rules of Auction.

A. DEFINITIONS

In these conditions of business, headnotes are for convenience only and shall not be used in their interpretation, any expression which denotes any gender shall include the other genders, any expression which denotes the singular shall include the plural (and vice versa), any expression which denotes a natural person shall include a juristic person (and vice versa) and the following terms shall have the following meanings:

1. “auction” means any private treaty or auction sale at which a lot is offered for sale by the Company;

2. “auctioneer” means the representative of the Company conducting an auction;

3. “bidder” means any person making, attempting or considering to make a bid or offer to buy a lot at an auction, or private treaty sale;

4. “Buyer” means the bidder who makes the bid or offer for any lot that is finally accepted by theauctioneer (after determination by the auctioneer of any dispute that may exist in respect thereof) at a sale of that lot, and (where the Buyer is an agent acting for a principal), the Buyer and the Buyer’s principal jointly and severally;

5. “Buyer’s premium” means the premium payable by the Buyer of a lot to the Company on the sale of that lot, calculated on the hammer price of that lot at the relevant current rates;

6. “catalogue” means any advertisement, brochure, estimate, pricelist, condition report and other publication (in whatever medium, electronically or otherwise) published by the Company in respect of any auction;

7. “current rates” means the Company’s current rates of commission, premiums and other amounts payable to the Company for the time being, together with VAT thereon (if any), all as published by the Company (whether in a catalogue or otherwise) or as agreed between a prospective Buyer or Seller (as the case may be) and the Company;

8. a “deliberate forgery” means an imitation made with the intention of deceiving as to authorship, origin, date, age, period, culture or source, which is not shown to be such in the description in the catalogue and which at the date of the sale had a value materially less than it would have had if it had been in accordance with that description and includes any misrepresentation made with intention of deceiving as to authorship, origin, date, age, period, culture or source;

9. “hammer price” means the bid or offer made by
the Buyer for any lot that is finally accepted by theauctioneer (after determination by the auctioneer of any dispute that may exist in respect thereof) at a sale of that lot, together with VAT thereon (if any);

10. “lot” means any item or items to be offered for sale by the Company at an auction or private treaty sale;

11. “prime rate” means the publicly quoted base rate of Interest (percent, per annum compounded monthly in arrears and calculated on a 365 day year, irrespective of whether or not the year is a leap year) from time to time published by RMB Private Bank, or its successor-in-title, as being its prime overdraft rate, as certified by any manager of such bank, whose appointment, authority and designation need not be proved;

12. “private treaty” means the sale of any lot other than by auction sale at a price privately agreed on by the Buyer and Seller;

13. “purchase price” means the hammer price of any lot at a sale thereof, plus the applicable Buyer’s premium for that lot, plus all recoverable expenses for which the Buyer is liable in respect of that lot;

14. “recoverable expenses” includes all fees, taxes (including VAT), charges and expenses incurred by the Company in relation to any lot that the Company is entitled to recover from a Buyer or Seller;

15. “reserve” means the confidential minimum hammerprice (if any) at which a lot may be sold at an auction as agreed between the Seller of that lot and the Company in writing;

16. “sale proceeds” means the amount due by the Company to the Seller of a lot in respect of the sale of that lot, made up of the hammer price of the lot, less the applicable Seller’s commission for that lot, less all recoverable expenses for which the Seller is liable in respect of that lot and any other amounts due to the Company by the Seller in whatever capacity and howsoever arising.

17. “sale” means the sale of any lot at an auction, whether done by private treaty or auction sale, and “sell” and “sold” shall have corresponding meanings;

18. “Seller” means the person named as the Seller of any lot, being the person that offers the lot for sale; 19. “Seller’s commission” means the commission payable by the Seller to the Company on the sale of a lot that is calculated on the hammer price of that lot at the relevant current rate;

20. “VAT” means value added tax levied in terms of the Value Added Tax Act, 1991.

B. GENERAL TERMS AND RULES OF AUCTION

Every auction and/or sale shall be governed by these terms, section 45 of the Consumer Protection Act 68 of 2008 (“the Act”) and the rules of auction and in accordance with the laws of South Africa.

The provisions of section 45 reads as follows:
1. Auctions
1.1 In this section, “auction” includes a sale in execution of or pursuant to a court order, to the extent that the order contemplates that the sale is to be conducted by an auction.

1.2 When goods are put up for sale by auction in lots, each lot is, unless there is evidence to the contrary, regarded to be the subject of a separate transaction. 1.3 A sale by auction is complete when the auctioneer announces its completion by the fall of the hammer, or in any other customary manner, and until that announcement is made, a bid may be retracted.

1.4 Notice must be given in advance that a sale by auction is subject to –
(a) A reserved or upset price; or
(b) A right to bid by or on behalf of the owner, in which case the owner or auctioneer, or any one person on behalf of the owner or auctioneer, as the case may be, may bid at the auction.

1.5 Unless notice is given in advance that a sale by auction is subject to a right to bid by or on behalf of the owner or auctioneer:
(a) The owner or auctioneer must not bid or employ any person to bid at the sale;

(b) The auctioneer must not knowingly accept any bid from a person contemplated in paragraph B.1.5 (a); and (c) The consumer may approach a court to declare the transaction fraudulent, if this subsection has been violated.

1.6 The Minister may prescribe requirements to be complied with by an auctioneer, or different categories of auctioneer, in respect of:

(a) The conduct of an auction;
(b) The records to be maintained with respect to property placed for auction; and
(c) The sale of any such property by auction.

2. The rules of the auction are those promulgated in terms of the Regulations promulgated by the Minister of Trade and Industry dated 23 November 2010 under Government Gazette No. 33818 on 1 April 2011 and any subsequent amendment and/or variation to the rules and these terms.

3. In the event of there being a discrepancy between the rules and the terms herein, the rules shall be operative and overriding.

4. Every bid constitutes an offer, open for acceptance by the Auctioneer and such acceptance shall be signified by the fall of the hammer, or by theacceptance of the offer by the Company in the event of a private sale.

5. Buyers are solely responsible to satisfy themselves prior to auction/private treaty sale as to the condition of each lot and should exercise and rely on their own judgement as to whether the lot accords with the description or not.

5.1 Neither the Company, its servants, its employees, its agents and/or the Auctioneer shall be responsible whether directly or indirectly for any errors, omissions, acts of negligence, incorrect and/or inadequate descriptions or defects or lack of authenticity and/or inadequate descriptions or defects or lack of authenticity or lack of ownership or genuineness in any goods auctioned and sold. The Company shall not be held responsible for any incorrect, inaccurate or defective description of the goods listed for sale in the catalogue or in any condition report, publication, letter, or electronic transmission or to the attribution, origin, date, age, provenance, condition and description
of the goods sold, and shall not be responsible for any loss, damage, consequential damages and/or patrimonial loss of any kind or nature whatsoever and howsoever arising thereout.

5.2 No warranty, whether express, implied or tacit is given by the Company, its servants, its agents, or its employees, or the Auctioneer or the Seller or the Buyer of any lot shall be binding or legally enforceable.

5.3 Any lot which proves to be a ‘deliberate forgery’ (which will only be the case if an expert appointed by the Company for such purposes confirms same in writing) may be returned by the Buyer (as his sole remedy hereunder or at law) to the Company within 21 days of the date of auction in the same condition in which it was at the time of the auction, accompanied by a statement of defects, the number of the lot, and the date of the auction at which it was purchased. Ifthe Company is satisfied that the item is a ‘deliberateforgery’ and that the Buyer has and is able to transfer a good and marketable title to the lot, free from any third-party claims, the sale will be set aside and any amount paid in respect of the lot will be refunded, subject to the express condition that the Buyer will have no rights or claims against the Company if:

5.3.1 the description in the catalogue at the date of the sale was in accordance with the then generally accepted opinion of scholars and experts or fairlyindicated that there was conflict of such opinion; or5.3.2 the only method of establishing at the date of publication of the catalogue that the lot was a‘deliberate forgery’ was by means of a scientificprocess not generally accepted for use until after publication of the catalogue, or by a process which was unreasonably expensive or impractical.

5.4 Buyer’s claiming under this condition will be limited to any amount paid in respect of the lot and will not extend to any loss or damage of whatsoever nature suffered, or expense incurred by him/her.

5.5 The benefit of this condition will not be assignableand will rest solely and exclusively in the Buyer who, for the purpose of this condition, will be and only be the person to whom the original invoice is made out by the Company in respect of the lot sold.

6. The Company will have the sole, exclusive and absolute right, at its discretion, to refuse admission to any person to its premises or any other premises at which such auction is to be conducted.

7. The Company has the sole and absolute discretion without having to give any reasons therefore, to refuse any bid, withdraw or reoffer lots for auction (including after the fall of the hammer), cancel any sale if the Auctioneer and/or the Company believes that there may be an error or dispute of any nature whatsoever,and shall have the rights, as it deems fit, to divide anylot; to combine any two or more lots, or to put up any lot for auction again.

8. Any notice required to be given in connection with this agreement:

8.1 if given by the Company, shall be delivered by hand, or sent by registered post; or by telefax or by email, provided such address is given in which event such address shall constitute the domicilium citandi et executandi of the person to whom notice must be given. Notice shall be deemed to have been received by the person who is required to receive such notice, whether given personally or to a third party or any other manner as envisaged by this clause:

8.1.1 on the date of delivery if delivered by hand or telefax or email;

8.1.2 on the fourth (4th) day from the date of posting, including the date of posting if posted by prepaid registered post from within the Republic of South Africa, which postage shall be deemed to have been sent on receipt of the post office of proof ofposting.

8.2 if required by the Company, such writtennotification must be given to the Company at itstelefax number and/or email address as published in the brochure, alternatively the Company’s published address and/or fax number.

9. The Seller submits to the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the South African courts.

10. The Buyer and/or Seller, as the case may be, hereby pledges the goods either sold and/or bought as security to the Company for all amounts which are owing to it.

11. No variation, alteration, consensual termination, representation, condition, term or warranty, relaxation or waiver or release by the Company, or estoppel against the Company, or the suspension by the Company, in respect of these terms and conditions of business, or any part thereof, shall be of any force or effect unless reduced to writing and signed by the Company and the Buyer.

12. The Buyer shall be responsible for the payment of the Company’s legal costs, calculated on the scale as between attorney and client incurred by the Company in enforcing any of its rights of its principal whether such rights are exercised by way of legal proceedings or not.

13. Notwithstanding the nature or amount of the claim by the Company, the Company and the Buyer hereby consent to the jurisdiction of the Magistrate’s Court otherwise having jurisdiction; this consent is without prejudice to the right of the Company to institute proceedings and to obtain judgment or any order in the High Court of competent jurisdiction, the Company nevertheless still being entitled to claim on the High Court scale of costs and expenses, all as set out in this agreement.

C. TERMS RELATING TO BUYERS OF GOODS AT AN AUCTION OR BY PRIVATE TREATY

1. Buyer’s Registration

1.1 Buyer bidders must prior to the commencement of an auction register his/her identity on the Company’s Buyer’s card and such registration must with the necessary changes meet the requirements of Chapter 1 of the regulations in terms of the Financial Intelligence Centre Act, 2011, published in Notice No. R. 1595 in Gazette No. 24176 of 20 December 2002, in respect of establishment and verification of identity, and signthat entry. First time buyers must provide the Company with a copy of their identity document or passport and a photocopy of the front and back of a valid credit card. A sum of R5,000 may be resolution authorising him/her to do so.

2. Auction Bids

2.1 The goods (lots) sold shall be to the highest bidder whether the sum bid be equivalent to the real value or not. Where the sale is announced to be with reserve, the goods shall be sold to the highest bidder, either on or in excess of the reserve price.

2.2 No person shall, at any bid, advance less than theamount fixed for that purpose by the Auctioneer. Bidscan be retracted before the fall of the hammer but the Auctioneer may refuse any bid.

2.3 Should there be a dispute as to the highest bid, even after the fall of the hammer, the auctioneer shall in his sole and absolute discretion, determine which bid shall be accepted and the Company and/or the Auctioneer shall be absolved of any liability of any nature whatsoever in regard thereto. In the event of a dispute the Auctioneer may determine the dispute in his absolute discretion, or the property may, at the Auctioneer’s option, either be put up again at the last undisputed bid, or be withdrawn.

3. Minimum Bid

The auctioneer shall have the sole and absolute discretion and right to refuse any bid which does notexceed the previous bid by at least 5% (five percent)or such other percentage as the Auctioneer, in his/her discretion deems acceptable.

4. Buyer’s Premium

A Buyer’s premium, calculated at the applicable current rate of the hammer price, shall be payable by the Buyer to the Company in respect of the sale of each lot. The Buyer acknowledges that the Company, when acting as agent for the Seller of any lot, may also receive a Seller’s commission and/or other fees for or in respect of that lot. VAT at the prevailing rate is applicable on such Buyer’s premium.

5. Value Added Tax (“VAT”)

The Company acts as agent on behalf of the Seller and should the Seller be registered as a South African VAT vendor and has informed the Company that his lots must be charged with VAT, then such lots will be indicated in the catalogue with the symbol “†” and VAT at the prescribed rate will be charged on the hammer price and will be payable by the Buyer.

6. Absentee Bids

6.1 Upon request, the Company shall execute absentee bids on behalf of intending Buyers. Absentee bids are a service provided by the Company for the Buyers’benefit and the Company cannot be held responsiblefor errors or omissions with respect to the bidding process. Lots will be bought as cheaply as is allowed by other bids placed and the Seller’s reserves. In the event of identical bids, the earliest will take precedence. When absentee bids are placed by telephone they are accepted at the Buyer’s risk,and must be confirmed prior to the sale by letter orfacsimile.

6.2 All absentee bids shall be registered with the Company in accordance with the Company’s procedures and requirements not less than twenty-four (24) hours before the auction and/or the private treaty sale. The Company reserves its rights, at its sole and absolute discretion, to receive and/or reject such absentee bids and/or to receive and/or reject absentee bids if given less than twenty-four hours before the auction and/or private sale.

6.3 Absentee bidders must register his/her identity as per clause C.1 above.

7. Telephone Bids

7.1 Subject to a Buyer arranging with the Company at least twenty-four hours before the published time of the auction and subject to a Buyer completing such documentation as the Company may require it to do, whether it be by fax or by electronic transmission, or any other form of transmission a Buyer, on making such telephone call, is deemed to accept these Terms and Conditions and to be bound thereby and shall be permitted to bid by means of a telecommunication. The right of a Buyer to bid is subject to a telecommunication line being available, fully functional and operative. The person who makes the bid on the telephone shall be deemed to be the Buyer and shall be deemed to be personally liable for the payment of the purchase price and other amounts as are required to be paid. In executing bids on the telephone, the Buyer waives and abandons any claim howsoever or whatsoever arising against the Company and/or the Auctioneer, including any act or omission and/or act of negligence and/or any act on the part of the Company and the Auctioneer, or in failing to have regard or failing to take cognisance of such bid.

7.2 The Company reserves its rights, at its sole and absolute discretion, to receive and/or reject such telephone bids and/ or to receive and/or reject telephone bids if given less than twenty-four hours before the auction and/or private treaty sales.

7.3 The Company reserves the right to record telephone bidding and the telephone bidder consents to such recording.

8. Payment

8.1 The hammer price as defined in clause A.9 above,including further amounts payable in terms hereof such as Value Added Tax and the Buyer’s premium, shall forthwith become due, owing and payable to the Company in full immediately upon the knock down of the hammer and/or acceptance of the offer.

8.2 Any payment by a Buyer to the Company shall be applied by the Company towards any sums owing by the Buyer to the Company on any account whatever without regard to any directions of the Buyer or his/her agent, whether express or implied.

8.3 The purchase price shall be paid in South African rands. Foreign Buyers are required to make arrangements with their banking houses to transfer forex funds equivalent to the Rand value as stated on the purchase tax invoice. All fees relating to this transfer of funds from the foreign bank to the Company’s RSA account shall be for the account of the Buyer.

8.4 The Company accepts the following methods of payment:

8.4.1. Electronic Funds Transfer
Only bank transfers or electronic funds transfer will be accepted. No cheque or cash payment will be accepted.

8.4.2. Bank Transfers in South African Rands SWELZ (Pty) Ltd
First National Bank

Branch: Sandton, Johannesburg

Branch code: 210 835

Swift code: FIRNZAJJ

Current account number: 628 041 609 51

8.4.3. Credit Cards
Payment by all major credit cards will be accepted.

8.4.4. Payfast

9. Credit terms

No credit shall be given to any Buyer unless prior to the auction the Company has in its absolute discretion agreed in writing in response to a request to grant the Buyer credit. The Buyer shall make payment of such amounts of interest and other charges as are permitted in terms of the National Credit Act 34 of 2005. Ownership of the goods sold shall not vest and/ or pass to the Buyer until such time as the full purchase price including VAT thereon and any other amounts have been paid in full.

10. Collection of goods

10.1 Ownership of the goods purchased by a Buyer whether credit or cash sales shall remain vested in the principal (and/or the Company under circumstances where the Company sells its own goods), until such time as the Buyer has made full payment to the Company which payment includes the payment of the purchase price of the goods, the Company’s commission, Value Added Tax on the sale and any other amounts as provided for herein.

10.2 The Buyer shall, at his/her/its expense, collect the goods (“take delivery”) purchased by it at the auction and/or sale immediately after the auction, unless
such goods due to their size and/or weight cannot immediately be removed in which event such goods shall be collected from the auction site by no later than 16h00 on the day following the auction unless such day is a Saturday or a Sunday or a public holiday in which event such goods will be collected by no later than 16h00 on the following business day. The Company shall not render any assistance to the Buyer to pack, 
remove, transport or store such goods on the Buyer’s behalf. The Buyer will be responsible for all packing, removal, insurance and storage charges. Goods not collected within 30 days of the auction will be dealt with as per clause C.11.

10.3 Should the Company render any assistance at all of any nature whatsoever to a Buyer in removing the goods from the auction site then and in such event
the Company’s employees shall be deemed to be the agents and/or servants and/or employees of the Buyer and the Company is exempt from any liability or any culpability in respect of the Company’s employees and/ or servants executing such work.

11. Uncollected Goods

The Buyer will be responsible for the collection of all goods purchased on auction or private treaty and such collection of goods must be made within 30 days of the auction or private treaty sale. Goods not collected will be dealt with as follows:The Company will notify the Buyer that the goods must be collected within 30 days of such notice. The notice required to be given shall be in terms of clause B.8.1.

11.1 Should the Buyer not have collected the goodswithin 30 days of notification, the Buyer herebyirrevocably transfers ownership of such goods to the Company who shall retain ownership of such goods, whose ownership shall be indisputable. The Company shall then, in its sole and absolute discretion, dispose of such goods at the best price it can obtain from a willing and able Buyer.

11.2 Subject to paragraph C.11.1 above, if the Company is able to sell the lot at an auction and/or private treaty sale, the Company shall dispose
of such goods at the best available price and shall deduct from the proceeds of such sale, all amounts as were expended by the Company in insuring, storing, carrying, transporting, retaining and/or keeping such goods after the deduction of its commission, VAT, and any other expenses it incurred in respect of such goods. Should there be a shortfall, then and in such event the Buyer shall make payment to the Company, on demand, of such shortfall and all costs incurred by the Company in recovering such shortfall, including attorney and client costs shall be for the account of the Buyer.

11.3 The Company reserves the right to charge R25(twenty five rand) plus VAT per day to store any oneitem not collected from the Company’s place ofbusiness from the time the Buyer has been notified anduntil such time as the item has been collected.

12. The Buyer’s Risk

The Buyer shall be solely responsible for any loss of and/or damage to and/or diminution in value of and/ or deterioration to any goods (lots) purchased at the auction or at a private treaty sale immediately upon the knock down by the Auctioneer to the Buyer of the hammer price.

13. Import, export, copyright restrictions and licenses and quality in the goods sold

13.1 The Company makes no representation
or warranties whether express, implied or tacit pertaining to the authenticity, quality, genuineness, condition, value, origin, ownership of any goods 
or whether express, implied or tacit as to whether any Lot is subject to import, export, copyright and licence restrictions including permission from SAHRA. Endangered Species – any item made of or incorporating animal material such as ivory, bone,etc irrespective of value, will require a specific permitfrom the Department of Nature Conservation prior to exportation. It is the Buyer’s sole responsibility to obtain any copyright clearances or any necessary import, export or other licence required by law, including licences required under the Convention of the International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). The refusal of an export permit shall not permit the rescission of a sale.

13.2 The sale of any firearm is subject to the expressconditions of the Firearms Control Act 60 of 2000 and any amendments promulgated thereunder. Nofirearm will be delivered to any Buyer until he/she/it has produced a valid firearm license or a collector’s permitor any other document as required by the said Act. No sale shall be cancelled without proof to the Company’s satisfaction that the Buyer has the authority and licenseto receive such firearm. The onus to comply with theprovisions of the said Act is solely on the Buyer.

14. Breach by the Buyer

14.1 Should the Buyer breach any of the terms and conditions thereof, alternatively not make payment in full or collect the items bought as provided herein, or should there be any other breach, the Company, agent for the Seller (alternatively the Company in the event of it being the Seller of its own goods) will, and at its absolute and sole discretion, and without prejudice to any other rights it may have in law, be entitled to exercise on or more or all of the following remedies: 

 

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