The Pool Ahead is Not to be Trusted

by William Kentridge Hon RA

The RA Editions programme is proud to present The Pool Ahead is Not to be Trusted, a limited edition print by William Kentridge Hon RA. A sugarlift aquatint, this technique enables the artist to etch marks similar to brush strokes into the plate.

Produced as an edition of 40, each work is signed and numbered by the artist.

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£3,800.00

Artwork details

Material Sugarlift Aquatint
Dimensions 45 x 50cm
Edition of 40

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Product story

Rooted in Kentridge’s recent project The Head & the Load, ‘The Pool Ahead is not to be Trusted’ is a line from the project’s accompanying libretto. A stage piece of recorded music and voice, performance, shadows and projection, it was first presented at the Tate Turbine Hall in 2018.

'The Head & the Load is about Africa and Africans in the First World War, that is to say about the contradictions and paradoxes of colonialism that were heated and compressed by the circumstances of the war. It is about historical incomprehension (and inaudibility and invisibility). The colonial logic towards the black participants could be summed up as, "Lest their actions merit recognition, their deeds must not be recorded." The Head & the Load aims to recognise and record those deeds.' - William Kentridge


The RA Editions programme generates valuable revenue for the RA and in particular the RA Schools.​​

Please note: purchases of this edition are limited to one per purchaser or household, subject to availability. Any purchases which exceed this limit will be treated as void. Should we subsequently discover that any such void purchases have been fulfilled, we reserve all rights against the purchaser, including the right to require return or onward delivery and compensation for any damage or loss.

The Pool Ahead is Not to be Trusted is a new RA Edition by William Kentridge Hon RA. The print, made in a limited edition of 40, is a sugarlift aquatint, a technique of etching that enables the artist to etch marks that are similar to those produced by a brush into the plate.

‘The Pool Ahead is not to be Trusted’ is a line from the libretto for Waiting for the Sibyl, a stage piece for recorded music and voice, performance, shadows, and projection, presented at the Rome Opera in September 2019. Kentridge is working with Nhlanhla Mahlangu and five singers to create a captivating and haunting ‘choral sound world’ with Kyle Shepherd as both co-composer and musical director.

William Kentridge writes about the project:

“In 1968 Alexander Calder made a production for the Rome Opera called Work in Progress. On stage were some of his mobiles, painted backdrops, cyclists riding around the stage, with different pieces of music by an Italian composer. Fifty years after its first performance, Rome Opera is reviving the Calder work. Waiting for the Sibyl will be a companion piece and response to Work in Progress.

There is a story of the Cumean Sibyl, a prophetess. She would write people's fortunes or fates on oak leaves. The pile of oak leaves sat at the mouth of her cave. People would come to take the leaf on which was written their fate. But inevitably a wind would come up and swirl the leaves out of order, so you never knew if the leaf you had picked was your fate or not. The circling of the leaves in the wind, or the swirling of pages of the unbound book in the projections, becomes akin to the revolving leaves of the sculptures in the Calder.”

The themes of the project concern destiny, fate and our attempts to escape it. Kentridge notes that the contemporary Sibyl is the algorithm, which knows our future and our choices better than we do ourselves.

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RA Editions
The RA Editions programme publishes and showcases prints by Royal Academicians and invited artists. All are available to buy online, from the RA Shop in Gallery X as well as through a series of displays within the Keeper’s House and Burlington Gardens. The programme generates valuable revenue for the RA and, in particular, the RA Schools.

About William Kentridge Hon RA

William Kentridge (born Johannesburg, South Africa, 1955) is among the most prominent contemporary artists today. He works in and across mediums to create works of art that are grounded in politics, science, literature and history, whilst maintaining a space for contradiction and uncertainty. Kentridge’s work has been seen in museums, galleries and theatres around the world since the 1990s, including the... Go to artist page