Storm over closure of South Africa’s much-loved Irma Stern Museum

This article was first published by The Art Newspaper.

A row has erupted over the closure last year of the Irma Stern Museum (ISM), founded in 1971 to celebrate one of South Africa’s best-known artists, amid continuing uncertainty over when and whether it will reopen.

Irma Stern (1894-1966), whose work was displayed at the Venice Biennale several times in the 1950s and was the subject of an exhibition at Berlin’s Brücke Museum last year, is recognised both domestically and internationally. Her parents were German-Jewish but she was born in Transvaal and throughout her life travelled extensively, notably to Germany where she was initially associated with the German Expressionist painters of the time.

Having settled in South Africa in the 1920s, she moved into a house called The Firs in Rondebosch, Cape Town, and remained there until her death. She left her collections in trust for the encouragement and promotion of art: artefacts she had collected, plus her own works of art. Some rooms were kept substantially as they were when she lived there – most notably her studio with her paintbrushes, easel, rags and art. The collection was owned by a trust, and the museum was administered by University of Cape Town (UCT) on behalf of the trustees.