Rufino Tamayo, America, 401.3 by 1423.4 cm (4.01 by 14.23 m), est. $7/9 million
Sotheby’s New York to offer Important Mural by Rufino Tamayo, entitled America
A truly magnificent and aweinspiring mural, America was completed by Rufino Tamayo during an extraordinary five-month burst of production
]]>
October 29, 2008 – The November 18 Evening sale of Latin American Art at Sotheby’s will featureRufino Tamayo’s impressive mural, entitled America (est. $7/9 million). A truly magnificent and aweinspiringmural, America was completed by Rufino Tamayo during an extraordinary five-month burst ofproduction. Working at a feverish pace without assistants, Tamayo painted seven days a week to completewhat was to be his most important mural. Today it is rightly hailed as one of his finest masterpieces, thecrowning achievement of what was arguably his most glorious period. Of the five murals Tamayo executed inthe United States, America is the only one currently held in private hands.
America was painted during a time in which Tamayo was riding an international wave of success withexhibitions at some of the most prominent galleries of the time, including Julien Levy, Pierre Matisse, Perlsand Knoedler. At that time, Tamayo was already considered one of the most acclaimed artists of hisgeneration, a reputation that has only grown in the ensuing years. Today Tamayo is indeed regarded as oneof the great colorists of the twentieth century.
Executed in vinylite, an industrial synthetic paint favored by Tamayo for his large paintings because of itsportability and its ability to free the artist from the constraints of architecture and of working in situ, Americawas painted in Mexico City and briefly exhibited there. It was then rolled and transported to Houston.Spanning over 13 by 45 feet, America unfolds majestically through a series of symbols that allegorically relaythe heritage and richness of the Americas. Central to the composition is the figure of America, personified bya reclining female nude whose ample, white and sienna body stretches across much of the bottom half of thecanvas, surrounded by her natural resources that suggest the abundance of the continent and the convergingcultures that make the Americas truly unique.
A visual tour de force, America’s monumentality not only derives from its grand scale, but from the sheerdynamic force of its aesthetic vision. Here Tamayo appears to have harnessed the metaphysical dimensions ofPicasso’s Guernica, the epic drama of the Mexican School and the Abstract Expressionist’s embrace of theprimitive and the mythic to create a work that successfully asserts the timeless values of civilization. Byadopting an internationalist aesthetic, Tamayo presents a quintessentially modern and contemporaryperspective. At the time Tamayo painted this work, he was already regarded as one of the most importantartists of his generation, as is apparent from a statement made by the abstract expressionist painter BarnettNewman, who greatly admired Tamayo’s work, in a 1945 article on Tamayo and fellow New York Schoolpainter Adolph Gottlieb. Newman wrote, “Tamayo and Gottlieb, by their outstanding example as men ofthought, are making a contribution to the art of America of such importance that its impact will have a profoundinfluence on the art of Europe.”
America was originally commissioned in 1955 for the Bank of the Southwest in Houston. In 1993, Americawas sold to a private collector for a record price and soon returned to public view. It has generously been onloan to the Dallas Museum of Art for the past fifteen years, where it was on view in the lobby atrium. Otherimportant murals by the artist grace the walls of such prestigious institutions as the headquarters of theUNESCO in Paris, the Brown Fine Arts Center at Smith College in Northhampton, MA, El Museo delPalacio de Bellas Artes in Mexico City, the Universidad de Puerto Rico in San Juan, the Dallas Museum ofArt in Texas and the United Nations in New York.
Follow us on: