Arts & Entertainment

Rufino Tamayo Masterpiece: From Trash Bin To Auction Block

August Uribe , Sotheby's, New York
Date Posted: 11/02/07
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I am a senior vice president and one of the directors of the Impressionist and Modern Art Department here at Sotheby’s. I’m also an auctioneer. Why am I passionate about art? That’s an excellent question, which is extraordinarily difficult to answer. I was exposed to art as a child because my father was the cultural attaché with the United States Embassy growing up in Central and South America, so I have a personal affinity to arts of the Americas. I have studied the works of Rufino Tamayo and was involved in the recovery of his long-lost work, ‘Tres Personajes,’ which was found in the trash in New York by a woman named Elizabeth Gibson. The piece is going to be on the auction block on November 20, 2007 and is expected to sell for $750K to $1 million.

When I first moved to New York in 1987, one of my first jobs while working at a gallery was to help create a postcard announcing the theft of the painting ‘Tres Personajes,’ by Mexican artist Rufino Tamayo (1899-1991). So, I had never really seen the painting until May of this year when the painting was recovered. It is a work of art that is held in high regard by the scholarly community.

‘Tres Personajes’ is one of Rufino Tamayo’s masterpieces from his mature period. It is a culmination of the artist’s lifelong search and his exploration of color abstraction and surface build up of his canvases.

The way an appraiser comes up with a value is by studying recent previous sales and coming up with comparable examples of works that have sold. Interestingly, nothing quite comparable to this has sold in recent years. A suggestion of the painting’s importance is the fact that it was featured on the cover of a book on Tamayo written by Emily Genauer, who was one of the pre-eminent art historians.

We’re very excited to be having a painting of this caliber on the auction block next month. We have the privilege of offering this picture for sale and hopefully our audience is going to respond as positively as we have been.

The muralists were artists who were preoccupied with promoting the goals of the 1910 Mexican revolution. Tamayo was unlike the three principal muralists in Mexico, which are Diego Rivera, José Clemente Orozco and David Alfaro Siqueiros. Tamayo was also a member of the muralist movement, but he divorced himself officially from that movement in 1926 because he believed that art should be painted for art’s sake, not political propaganda’s sake.


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Re: Tamayo Masterpiece: From The Trash Bin To The Auction Block

By Michelle Kenneth, November 21, 2007 at 11:27

I see they put the story up on Yahoo! in the top news video section. The painting went for $1.2 Million.

Re: Tamayo Masterpiece: From The Trash Bin To The Auction Block

By Michelle Kenneth, November 2, 2007 at 13:30

That's what I thought! Thanks for finding out for me. : )

Re: Tamayo Masterpiece: From The Trash Bin To The Auction Block

By Heather Wallace, November 2, 2007 at 11:53

Okay, Michelle - to answer your question, Courtney King from Sotheby's says:

"The proceeds of the sale go to the original owner.The owner was extremely surprised when informed by August Uribe that the artwork had been recovered. The painting was bought by a husband for his wife as a gift. The husband has since passed away, and his wife remains the owner of the work."

Re: Tamayo Masterpiece: From The Trash Bin To The Auction Block

By Heather Wallace, November 2, 2007 at 11:41

Good question Michelle - I'll see if August can answer that.

Perhaps we should open the table for other questions for the expert. I know August is a very busy man, especially these days, but perhaps we can do a little Q&A about Rufino's work.

Heather Wallace
senior editor
Orato.com

Re: Tamayo Masterpiece: From The Trash Bin To The Auction Block

By Michelle Kenneth, November 2, 2007 at 11:33

Just a question for the writer: The proceeds of the sale go to whom? The original owners?

What was their story after they discovered their lost piece of artwork had been recovered? They currently retain ownership of the painting, correct?

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