Don’t expect to
find Rufino Tamayo’s vibrant watermelons or Frida
Kahlo’s searing self-portraits in the Latin American art collection belonging to
Patricia Phelps de Cisneros.
It’s not that Cisneros—who, with her husband, Venezuelan media
magnate Gustavo Cisneros, is among the world’s most influential collectors of
Latin American art—doesn’t enjoy the dramatic, figurative work that many people
in the United States reflexively think of. Rather, Cisneros chooses to focus on
geometric abstraction. A native of Caracas, she favors pieces by artists like
Joaquin Torres-Garcia and Jesus Soto because they call to mind the art she grew
up with during the height of modernism in the 1950s. As a collector, Cisneros
finds satisfaction tracking down art from schools such as Arte Concreto that
flowered at the same time as the more widely recognized figurative art.
 | WIFREDO LAM’S 5
Centimetros Sobre La Tierra sold for $688,000 at Sotheby’s last November. (Photograph by Sotheby’s.) | "What was fun about creating the collection of geometric
abstraction was that it was done at a time of absolutely no interest in this
type of art," she says. "It was exciting to go into galleries, and they would
have to go way into the back and dust off all these works."
However, Cisneros says that today she probably would not
attempt to amass such a collection because of soaring prices. Twenty years ago,
she and her husband spent at most $10,000 for an abstract piece; Cisneros says
these pieces would now command from $300,000 to $600,000. Last year alone,
Sotheby’s sold $40 million worth of Latin American art, compared to $16.3
million a decade earlier. In Sotheby’s November 2006 sale, two works sold for
more than $1 million each; the cover lot, a painting by Colombian Fernando
Botero, hit $1.7 million. A piece by the Mexican-born abstract painter Gunther
Gerzso from 1957 fetched $620,800—a record for the artist at auction.
The boom in Latin American art, particularly by contemporary
artists, reflects surging demand from wealthy Latin American buyers and new
interest from non-Latin collectors. The increasing population of Latinos in the
United States plays a key role as well. A growing group of successful Latinos
connect to their roots by buying Latin American art. Meanwhile, museums,
particularly in the Southwest, that neglected the category in recent decades
acquire the pieces partly to appeal to the rising Hispanic population. "In the
beginning, it was much more segmented, but now some of the top bidders in our
auctions are not even Latin American," says Maria Bonta de la Pezuela, director
of Latin America at Sotheby’s. "People bring their eyes and tastes, and buy what
moves them—and that has nothing to do with the fact that the palm tree in a
painting reminds them of the house where they grew up."
 | GUNTHER GERZSO’S Paisaje went for $620,800 at the same
auction. | Although the region encompasses the entire territory south of
the Rio Grande, buyers compete for an extremely limited supply of works. In the
early 20th century, for example, there were far fewer artists in Mexico
producing far fewer paintings than in the United States. After the revolution,
no art market even existed. Collector Lance Aaron, an American who lives with
his Mexico-born wife and children in Mexico City, is known as one of the world’s
premier collectors of early 20th century Mexican modern paintings, sculpture and
folk/popular arts. He estimates that there are fewer than 1,000 museum-quality
pieces by Mexican artists from the years 1920 to 1950, and similar situations
exist in other Latin American countries. Latin American museums have already
snatched up many of the great pieces, and those that do become available often
change hands privately, rather than appear in public auctions.
Yet Latin American art remains attractive to collectors because
of the diversity of the works—and the bargain prices compared to other
contemporary art. Works by Cuban artist Wifredo Lam provide a case in point. At
Sotheby’s November sale, an anonymous bidder paid $688,000—double the high
estimate—for Lam’s 1955 painting 5
Centimetros Sobre La Tierra. Yet aficionados
revere Lam for his sophisticated cubist paintings, which many consider on par
with those of his friend and contemporary, Pablo Picasso, who routinely fetches
millions.
The same comparison holds true for well-established Latin
American artists and contemporary American artists. New York–based dealer
Mary-Anne Martin, whom many credit with launching the market for Latin American
art in the U.S. by organizing the first such sale at Sotheby’s in the late
1970s, believes that the run-up in prices for work by contemporary American
artists such as Jeff Koons and Lisa Yuskavage makes more-affordable Latin
American artists, whose popularity has endured for decades, appealing. "This is
a market where there are tried and true artists whose work represents a more
established and secure purchase than work by younger artists," she says.
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