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Auction archive: Lot number 28

Joaquín Torres - García

Latin America
18 Nov 2015
Estimate
US$180,000 - US$250,000
Price realised:
US$233,000
Auction archive: Lot number 28

Joaquín Torres - García

Latin America
18 Nov 2015
Estimate
US$180,000 - US$250,000
Price realised:
US$233,000
Beschreibung:

Joaquín Torres - García Objectos con estructura interior 1940 oil on board 20 1/2 x 30 3/4 in. (52.1 x 78.1 cm) Signed and dated "40 J.T.G." center right. This is work No. 1940.35 from the Online Catalogue Raisonné under the direction of Cecilia de Torres, Assisted by Susanna V. Temkin
Provenance Estate of the artist Ifigenia Torres, Montevideo Estate of Ifigenia Torres Private Collection, New York Jan Krugier Gallery, New York Private Collection Christie's, Paris, Art Contemporain, May 30, 2011, lot 13 Acquired from the above sale by the present owner Literature E. Jardí, Joaquín Torres-García , 1973, p.228 (illustrated) A. Maslach, Joaquín Torres-García sol y luna del arcano, 1998, p. 575 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Joaquín Torres-García was born in Montevideo, Uruguay in 1874, where he lived until he was 17 years old. His family then moved to Mataró, Barcelona where he enrolled at the Escuela Oficial de Bellas Artes. Shortly after he joined the Catalan cultural movement, Noucentisme, which would provide the foundation for his development as an artist. His particular style of Noucentisme rejected modernism and embodied a classicist approach. Torres-García believed that Classicism provided him with a model of order, a language, and an educational reference that would overcome the realist concept of representation. This enabled him to create a type of Catalan art that also shared a universal vision. However, his works were more radical than those of his contemporaries, which caused him to be misunderstood and later excluded from the Catalan intelligentsia. In 1917, his work became even more radical as he began depicting urban scenes that were faithful to the structure of the pictorial plane yet far from any realist criteria of representation. Hence, even at this early stage in his career Torres-García’s strictly geometric, rational and synthetic constructivist style began to subtly emerge. However, the artist’s avant-garde style was not fully appreciated in Europe and, due to financial issues, he was eventually forced to return to Uruguay. Torres-García’s return to Uruguay after 43 years of absence marked a pivotal moment in his career, coinciding with the time during which the present lot was created. He was delighted to witness the grand twentieth century metropolis that the capital of Uruguay had become, but he recognized that the artistic life in the city was outmoded. To this end, he started publishing innumerable articles in various papers, gave lectures and exhibited extensively throughout Montevideo. This was for the sole purpose of instructing his countrymen and gaining new converts to the cause of modern art. Importantly, in his native country he finally found a newly fresh artistic environment where he developed Constructive Universalism to its full potential. He began to introduce a series of symbolic and geometric forms, arranged with a remarkable sense of structural rhythm. These orthogonal symbols which include squares, triangles and other archetypes associated with Pre-Columbian art, alluded to the world of reason, matter and emotion. Torres-García also realized that his concept of Constructivism adapted perfectly to the cosmovision of various indigenous civilizations given their preference for abstraction and two-dimensional figures over naturalistic representation in their plastic arts. The still life rendered in this work can also be placed within the larger panorama of the twentieth century aesthetic movements, where the painting is imbued with the aesthetic of Cubism, seen in the composition and palette. Furthermore, the Constructivism and palette of earthy and red undertones also allude to the artist’s series of wooden toys. This, in turn, evokes the Torres- García’s obsessive interest in wood as an artistic medium, which was, at the same time, something intimate and personal, as it related to his youth in Uruguay. The material of wood reminded him of his father’s sawmill next to their family owned shop in Montevideo during his youth. In short, Objetos con estructura interior, 1940 is representative of a very important period within the artist’s oeuvre. This still life perfectly exemplifies Torres-García’s pictorial temperament. Indeed, in describing these quotidian elements from the

Auction archive: Lot number 28
Auction:
Datum:
18 Nov 2015
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
Beschreibung:

Joaquín Torres - García Objectos con estructura interior 1940 oil on board 20 1/2 x 30 3/4 in. (52.1 x 78.1 cm) Signed and dated "40 J.T.G." center right. This is work No. 1940.35 from the Online Catalogue Raisonné under the direction of Cecilia de Torres, Assisted by Susanna V. Temkin
Provenance Estate of the artist Ifigenia Torres, Montevideo Estate of Ifigenia Torres Private Collection, New York Jan Krugier Gallery, New York Private Collection Christie's, Paris, Art Contemporain, May 30, 2011, lot 13 Acquired from the above sale by the present owner Literature E. Jardí, Joaquín Torres-García , 1973, p.228 (illustrated) A. Maslach, Joaquín Torres-García sol y luna del arcano, 1998, p. 575 (illustrated) Catalogue Essay Joaquín Torres-García was born in Montevideo, Uruguay in 1874, where he lived until he was 17 years old. His family then moved to Mataró, Barcelona where he enrolled at the Escuela Oficial de Bellas Artes. Shortly after he joined the Catalan cultural movement, Noucentisme, which would provide the foundation for his development as an artist. His particular style of Noucentisme rejected modernism and embodied a classicist approach. Torres-García believed that Classicism provided him with a model of order, a language, and an educational reference that would overcome the realist concept of representation. This enabled him to create a type of Catalan art that also shared a universal vision. However, his works were more radical than those of his contemporaries, which caused him to be misunderstood and later excluded from the Catalan intelligentsia. In 1917, his work became even more radical as he began depicting urban scenes that were faithful to the structure of the pictorial plane yet far from any realist criteria of representation. Hence, even at this early stage in his career Torres-García’s strictly geometric, rational and synthetic constructivist style began to subtly emerge. However, the artist’s avant-garde style was not fully appreciated in Europe and, due to financial issues, he was eventually forced to return to Uruguay. Torres-García’s return to Uruguay after 43 years of absence marked a pivotal moment in his career, coinciding with the time during which the present lot was created. He was delighted to witness the grand twentieth century metropolis that the capital of Uruguay had become, but he recognized that the artistic life in the city was outmoded. To this end, he started publishing innumerable articles in various papers, gave lectures and exhibited extensively throughout Montevideo. This was for the sole purpose of instructing his countrymen and gaining new converts to the cause of modern art. Importantly, in his native country he finally found a newly fresh artistic environment where he developed Constructive Universalism to its full potential. He began to introduce a series of symbolic and geometric forms, arranged with a remarkable sense of structural rhythm. These orthogonal symbols which include squares, triangles and other archetypes associated with Pre-Columbian art, alluded to the world of reason, matter and emotion. Torres-García also realized that his concept of Constructivism adapted perfectly to the cosmovision of various indigenous civilizations given their preference for abstraction and two-dimensional figures over naturalistic representation in their plastic arts. The still life rendered in this work can also be placed within the larger panorama of the twentieth century aesthetic movements, where the painting is imbued with the aesthetic of Cubism, seen in the composition and palette. Furthermore, the Constructivism and palette of earthy and red undertones also allude to the artist’s series of wooden toys. This, in turn, evokes the Torres- García’s obsessive interest in wood as an artistic medium, which was, at the same time, something intimate and personal, as it related to his youth in Uruguay. The material of wood reminded him of his father’s sawmill next to their family owned shop in Montevideo during his youth. In short, Objetos con estructura interior, 1940 is representative of a very important period within the artist’s oeuvre. This still life perfectly exemplifies Torres-García’s pictorial temperament. Indeed, in describing these quotidian elements from the

Auction archive: Lot number 28
Auction:
Datum:
18 Nov 2015
Auction house:
Phillips
New York
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