LATIN AMERICA [Catalogue]

Page 1

Latin America New York, 22 November 2016

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52. Carlos Cruz-Diez

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25. Mario Carreño

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53. Jesús Rafael Soto

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Cool. Transcendent. Now.

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20th Century & Contemporary Art.

Jean-Paul Engelen

Robert Manley

Worldwide Co-Head of 20th Century and Contemporary Art +1 212 940 1390 jpengelen@phillips.com

Worldwide Co-Head of 20th Century & Contemporary Art and Deputy Chairman +1 212 940 1358 rmanley@phillips.com

Chairman & Senior Advisors

Hugues Jofre

Francesco Bonami

Arnold Lehman

Chairman, UK & Europe and Senior Advisor to the Chairman and CEO +44 207 901 7923 hjofre@phillips.com

Senior Advisor to the Chairman and CEO fonami@phillips.com

Senior Advisor to the Chairman and CEO +1 212 940 1385 alehman@phillips.com

International Business Director.

Deputy Chairmen.

Svetlana Marich Worldwide Deputy Chairman +44 20 7318 4010 smarich@phillips.com

Matt Carey-Williams

Finn Schouenborg

Deputy Chairman, Europe Dombernowsky and Asia and International Deputy Chairman, Head of Business Europe and Asia Development +44 20 7318 4034 +44 20 7318 4089 fdombernowsky@phillips.com mcarey-williams@phillips.com

Jonathan Crockett

Sam Hines

August Uribe

Alexander Payne

Deputy Chairmen, Asia and Head of 20th Century & Contemporary Art, Asia +852 2318 2023 jcrockett@phillips.com

Deputy Chairman, Asia and International Head of Watches +852 6773 9315 shines@phillips.com

Deputy Chairman, Americas +1 212 940 1208 auribe@phillips.com

Deputy Chariman, Europe and Worldwide Head of Design +44 20 7318 4052 apayne@phillips.com

Bart van Son International Business Director +44 207 901 7912 bvanson@phillips.com

New York.

Scott Nussbaum

Zach Miner

Rachel Adler Rosan

Kate Bryan

Kevie Yang

Head of Department +1 212 940 1354 snussbaum@phillips.com

Senior Specialist +1 212 940 1256 zminer@phillips.com

Senior Specialist +1 212 940 1333 radlerrosan@phillips.com

Head of Evening Sale +1 212 940 1267 kbryan@phillips.com

Specialist +1 212 940 1254 kyang@phillips.com

John McCord

Rebekah Bowling

Katherine Lukacher

Sam Mansour

Head of Day Sale +1 212 940 1261 mccord@phillips.com

Head of New Now +1 212 940 1250 rbowling@phillips.com

Associate Specialist +1 212 940 1215 klukacher@phillips.com

Associate Specialist +1 212 940 1219 smansour@phillips.com

London.

Peter Sumner

Nathalie Zaquin-Boulakia Jonathan Horwich

Matt Langton

Henry Highley

Tamila Kerimova

Simon Tovey

Head of Contemporary Art +44 20 7318 4063 psumner@phillips.com

Senior Specialist Senior Specialist +44 20 7901 7931 +44 20 7901 7935 nzaquin-boulakia@phillips.com jhorwich@phillips.com

Senior Specialist +44 20 7318 4074 mlangton@phillips.com

Head of Evening Sale +44 20 7318 4061 hhighley@phillips.com

Head of Day & New Now Sales +44 20 7318 4065 tkerimova@phillips.com

Associate Specialist +44 20 7318 4084 stovey@phillips.com

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Hong Kong.

Sandy Ma

Charlotte Raybaud

Head of Evening Sale +852 2318 2025 sma@phillips.com

Specialist +852 2318 2026 craybaud@phillips.com

International Specialists & Regional Directors.

Deniz Atac Specialist, Turkey +9 053 337 41198 dztac@phillips.com

Maria Cifuentes Caruncho Specialist, France +33 142 78 67 77 mcifuentes@phillips.com

Carolina Lanfranchi

Maura Marvao

Oksana Katchaluba

Dr. Alice Trier

Specialist, Italy +39 338 924 1720 clanfranchi@phillips.com

Specialist, Portugal +351 917 564 427 mmarvao@phillips.com

Specialist, Geneva +41 22 906 80 00 okatchaluba@phillips.com

Specialist, Germany +49 173 25 111 69 atrier@phillips.com

Silvia Coxe Waltner

Melyora de Koning

Blake Koh

Cecilia Lafan

Kyoko Hattori

Jane Yoon

Kalista Fenina

Regional Director, Seattle +1 206 604 6695 scwaltner@phillips.com

Senior Specialist, Denver +1 917 657 7193 mdekoning@phillips.com

Regional Director, Los Angeles +1 323-383-3266 bkoh@phillips.com

Regional Director, Mexico +52 1 55 5413 9468crayclafan@phillips.com

Regional Director, Japan +81 90 2245 6678 khattori@phillips.com

International Specialist, Korea + 82 10 7389 7714 jyoon@phillips.com

Specialist, Moscow +7 905 741 15 15 kfenina@phillips.com

Latin America

Henry Allsopp

Kaeli Deane

Valentina Garcia

Worldwide Head +44 20 7318 4060 hallsopp@phillips.com

Head of Sale +1 212 940 1352 kdeane@phillips.com

Specialist, Miami +1 917 583 4983 vgarcia@phillips.com

Client Advisory. London.

New York.

Guy Vesey

Dawn Zhu

Lily Atherton Hanbury

Fiona McGovern

Philae Knight

Sara Tayeb-Khalifa

Head of Client Advisory +44 20 7901 7934 gvesey@phillips.com

Client Advisory Manager +44 20 7318 4017 dzhu@phillips.com

Client Advisory Manager +44 20 7318 4071 lhanbury@phillips.com

Client Advisory Manager +44 20 7318 4054 fmcgovern@phillips.com

Client Advisory Director +1 212 940 1313 pknight@phillips.com

Client Advisory Manager +1 212 940 1383 stayebkhalifa@phillips.com

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4. Mariana Palma

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Latin America New York, 22 November 2016

Auction & Viewing Location 450 Park Avenue New York 10022 Auction 22 November 2016 at 11am Viewing 18 – 22 November Friday 10am - 6pm Saturday 10am - 6pm Sunday 10am - 6pm Monday 10am - 6pm Sale Designation When sending in written bids or making enquiries please refer to this sale as NY010916 or Latin America.

Latin American Art Department Worldwide Director Henry Allsopp +44 20 7318 4060 Head of Sale Kaeli Deane +1 212 940 1352 Specialist, Miami Valentina Garcia +1 917 583 4983 Cataloguer Carolina Scarborough +1 212 940 1391 Administrator Isabel Suarez +1 212 940 1227

Absentee and Telephone Bids tel +1 212 940 1228 fax +1 212 924 1749 bidsnewyork@phillips.com

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1. Los Carpinteros

Cuba b. 1969, b. 1971

El barrio signed, titled and dated “El Barrio - Los Carpinteros - La Habana - 2004” lower edge watercolor on paper 45 x 65 7/8 in. (114.3 x 167.3 cm) Executed in 2004, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Galeria Fortes Vilaça. Estimate $40,000-60,000 Provenance Galeria Fortes Vilaça, São Paulo Acquired from the above by the present owner Literature G. Amkele and P. Zyman, ed., Los Carpinteros: Handwork - Constructing the World, Vienna, 2010, p. 35 (illustrated)

“As in the drawing and installation both titled El Barrio, the buildings are chaotically piled up but not destroyed. The disarrangement is produced through an accurate design of suspended relations and structures. The drawings of Los Carpinteros are often staged as studies, pretending to be sketches ‘after nature,’ but they are far more exploratory and performative: they create a reality rather than depicting one.” (G. Amkele and P. Zyman, ed., Los Carpinteros: Handwork - Constructing the World, Vienna, 2010, p. 34)

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“Reality cannot be photographed or represented. We can only create a new reality. And my dilemma is how to make art out of a reality that most of us would rather ignore. How do you make art when the world is in such a state?” Alfredo Jaar

2. Alfredo Jaar

Chile b. 1956

Embrace quadvision lightbox with four color transparencies 24 7/8 x 22 1/8 x 3 1/2 in. (63.2 x 56.2 x 8.9 cm) Executed in 1996, this work is number 3 from an edition of 3. Estimate $20,000-30,000 Provenance Galerie Thomas Schulte, Berlin Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited Charlotte, The Light Factory, Let There Be Light, March 1997 (another example exhibited) Berlin, Galerie Franck + Schulte, The Silence of Nduwayezu, April 1997 (another example exhibited) Milan, Pirelli Hangar Bicocca, Alfredo Jaar – It is difcult, 2008 (another example exhibited)

Details of the present lot

This work is part of the Rwanda Project (1994-2000). Afer quadvisions became obsolete, the work was adapted to a video, displayed on a vertical monitor, which rotates the four same images. This work is in the original quadvision format.

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Property From a Distinguished Brazilian Collection

3. Os Gêmeos

Brazil b. 1974

Untitled mixed media on wood doors 83 7/8 x 68 1/8 in. (213 x 173 cm) Painted in 2009, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Galeria Fortes Vilaça. Estimate $120,000-180,000 Provenance Galeria Fortes Vilaça, São Paulo Acquired from the above by the present owner

“Everybody has yellow inside. For us it’s a very spiritual color… All the colors you see are improvised, everything we do is improvised.” Os Gêmeos

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Property from a Distinguished Brazilian Colletion

4. Mariana Palma

Brazil b. 1979

Untitled acrylic and oil on canvas 78 3/4 x 47 1/4 in. (200 x 120 cm) Painted in 2012, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Casa Triângulo. Estimate $50,000-70,000 Provenance Casa Triângulo, São Paulo Acquired from the above by the present owner

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5. Olga de Amaral

Colombia b. 1932

Moon Basket 14 signed, titled and dated “Moon Basket 14 - 1988 - Olga de Amaral” on label afxed on the reverse gesso, acrylic and gold leaf on linen 65 3/8 x 47 1/2 in. (166.1 x 120.7 cm) Executed in 1988, this work is registered in the artist’s archives under reference number OA0536. Estimate $80,000-120,000 Provenance Private Collection, San Francisco

Detail of the present lot

“Gold is the abstraction of color.” Olga de Amaral

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6. Beatriz Milhazes

Brazil b. 1960

Untitled signed and dated “B. Milhazes - 1992” on the reverse oil on canvas 31 1/2 x 27 1/2 in. (80 x 69.9 cm) Painted in 1992. Estimate $200,000-300,000 Provenance Private Collection, Mexico City (acquired directly from the artist) Mary-Anne Martin Fine Art, New York Acquired from the above by the present owner

Beatriz Milhazes is best known for her bold and collaged compositions. Born in 1960 in Rio de Janeiro, Milhazes studied at Escola de Arte Visuais do Parque Lague from 1981 until 1982. In 1984 she formed part of the historic exhibition entitled Como vai você geração 80? (How Are You 80s Generation?). The exhibition featured a group of Brazilian artists who championed painting as a counterpoint to the conceptual art practices that were prevalent in the 1970s. Many of these artists, including Milhazes were utilizing new techniques and materials in their artistic practice. Milhazes draws inspiration from a variety of sources including the native fora and fauna of Rio de Janiero, Brazilian Carnival, 19th century lacework, and Baroque ornamentation. The present lot is an important early example of the artist’s experimentation with circular motifs, which would later become prevalent in her work. The central focal point of the composition is a large oval shaped lace collar and accompanying lace frill. Rendered in hues of sof pink, the central image contrasts with the brighter green and pink hues of the background creating a dynamic composition. In addition to the prominent lace detail, Milhazes includes smaller colorful circular elements throughout the canvas along with small ornamental elements rendered in black, such as a fower, a necklace, and other decorative designs. In Untitled, Milhazes has begun to build a visual lexicon of ornamental imagery: frills, necklaces, fowers, and arabesques. It highlights her interest in elevating decorative imagery to the level of contemporary art. In this work, Milhazes utilizes traditional Brazilian iconography all while drawing upon European Modernist style, namely that of Henri Matisse. Beatriz Milhazes’ represented Brazil in the Venice Biennale in 2003 and more recently had a solo exhibition at the Perez Art Museum Miami in 2014 entitled Jardim Botanico.

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7. Abraham Cruzvillegas

Mexico b. 1968

Observatorio oriente (Eastern Observatory) beeswax candle, stufed cloth ball, iron wire and paper clippings Height: 67 7/8 in. (172.4 cm) Executed in 2003. Estimate $30,000-50,000 Provenance Museum of Fine Arts Houston, The Latin American Experience Gala Auction, 2005 (donated by the artist) Acquired from the above sale by the present owner

At the core of Abraham Cruzvillegas’ artistic practice is an interest in found objects. Considered one of Mexico’s most important contemporary artists, Cruzvillegas’ interest in modest materials stems from his upbringing in Colonia Ajusco, a largely unplanned and impoverished part of southern Mexico City. Due to the lack of infrastructure in Colonia Ajusco, many of the residents including Cruzvillegas’ parents were forced to build their own homes and survive with minimal resources. In the present lot, the artist utilizes a large beeswax candle, wire and paper clippings to create a dynamic composition. In using found materials, Cruzvillegas not only provides social commentary on the ever expanding urban sprawl of Mexico City, but also elevates quotidian objects to the level of artistic materials. Furthermore, the artist forces the viewer to reevaluate the defnition of beauty when contemplating the seemingly mundane. Abraham Cruzvillegas was the frst Mexican artist to create an installation for the Turbine Hall in the Tate Modern and his work is held in important museum collections including The Museum of Modern Art.

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8. Damián Ortega

Mexico b. 1967

Unfolding/Flip Chair oil on four wooden chairs 33 7/8 x 103 1/8 x 17 3/4 in. (86 x 262 x 45 cm) Executed in 2005, this work is unique. Estimate $50,000-70,000 Provenance White Cube, London Acquired from the above by the present owner

“It’s something I’ve always observed – how much you can interfere with or transform the context, or how much a context can transform you.” Damian Ortega

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9. Carlos Cruz-Diez

Venezuela b. 1923

Physichromie No. 1020 signed, titled and dated “Physichromie No. 1.020 - Cruz-Diez - Paris 1975” on the reverse silkscreen and plastic elements on metal support with aluminum frame 39 3/8 x 78 3/4 in. (100 x 200 cm) Executed in 1975. Estimate $400,000-600,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner We are grateful to the Cruz-Diez Art Foundation for their kind assistance in cataloguing this work.

“The nature of color should change, it is no longer just a thin layer of change, but instead something that truly alters perception.” Carlos Cruz-Diez

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For fve decades the Venezuelan artist Carlos CruzDiez has refected on his experience of observing color as a sensitivity of one’s reality. Triggering a lifelong restlessness of infnite possibilities to investigate the chromatic spectrum, “color appeared and disappeared without the beneft of a support; it was not a substance applied on a canvas with a brush. And yet, I noticed that the emotion it evoked was just as powerful as it would be in the case of a painting. This was what convinced me to look for other solutions and other ideas concerning the use of color in art” (Carlos Cruz-Diez, Cruz-Diez: Color Espacial, 2015, Centro Cultural Internacional Oscar Niemeyer, p. 15). Mastering endless variations in medium and size, Cruz-Diez genially presents the viewer with non-conventional ways to experience this as a spectacle and a stimulating phenomenon of interpretation. Born in 1923 in Caracas, Cruz-Diez, a pioneer in the felds of Op and Kinetic art studied in the Escuela de Bellas Artes from 1940-1945, earning a living as a graphic designer while simultaneously developing his artistic tendencies focusing on fgurative social realism. In the 1950s, his travels to Europe and his decision to permanently move to Paris caused a pivotal change in the development of his artistic language. Giacomo Balla, Street Light, circa 1910-1911. Oil on canvas, 683/4 x 451/4 in. (174.6 x 115.9 cm), Museum of Modern Art, New York © 2016 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / SIAE, Rome

Claude Monet, Meule au Soleil, 1891. Oil on canvas, 24 x 39 in. (61 x 99 cm)

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Morris Louis, Dalet Kaf, 1959. Acrylic resin (Magna) on canvas, 1005/8 x 143 in. (255.6 x 363.2 cm), Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, © 2016 Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA), Rights Administered by Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York, All Rights Reserved.

The present lot, Physichromie No. 1020 (1975), forms part of the artists most remarkable and striking series of work that he began to create in 1959, defned by the artist as “a light trap where a series of color strips interact and transform one another” (Osbel Suarez, Carlos CruzDiez: Color Happens, Fundación Juan, Madrid, 2009, p. 20). By gluing sheets of colored cardboard perpendicular to a stable background, these constructions produced a chromatic efect that was not only dependent on the lighting but also on the movement of the viewer. Thereupon producing a diferent chromatic sequence each time the spectator interacts with the piece. In 1961, the artist introduced the use of clear thin translucent sheets and in 1964 began using a template as a means of homogenizing its appearance. While the early Physichromies included select colors such as black, red, white and green, the present lot contains a variety of colors including shades of red, yellow, pink and purple. Physichromie No. 1020, is an outstanding example of the artist’s mature style and his mechanized production of these works. Cruz-Diez employed a metal support to project a series of colors; the large scale of the piece, along with a multitude of colors, invites the viewer

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to observe the piece from multiple angles, producing a unique visual experience each time. In Physichromie No. 1020, as in Cruz-Diez’s other kinetic pieces, the viewer is not merely a spectator, but an integral component of the artwork whose unique vision, position and perspective activates a multitude of color refections. “When the sun is going down at the end of the day, there is an intense saturation of color that afects the trees and the land, objects and people. Everything is bathed in a monochromatic shade of orange that gradually fades as night falls.” (Carlos Cruz-Diez, Cruz-Diez: Color Espacial, Centro Cultural Internacional Oscar Niemeyer, May 2015, p. 15). While the present lot is a masterful example of the artist’s exploration with the entire color spectrum, the dominant red illustrates the signifcance of this particular hue within Cruz-Diez’s extensive oeuvre. This vibrant color coupled with the remarkable size of the present lot asserts its impressive wall power and its relation to the masters who infuenced his work, including Impressionists such as Claude Monet who frst explored the efects of light on their surroundings.

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10. Anna Maria Maiolino

Brazil b. 1942

Untitled (from the series ‘Projetos Construidos’) signed and dated “Anna Maria Maiolino 1975” lower right; further signed, titled, numbered and dated “Anna Maria Maiolino - 1974 - 1/5 + 1 prototipo 2007 - s/titulo de Série: “Projetos Construidos” on the reverse India ink and Letraset on paper in wooden box 28 1/8 x 38 3/4 x 3 1/4 in. (71.4 x 98.4 x 8.3 cm) Conceived in 1974-1975 and executed in 2007, this work is number 1 from an edition of 5. Estimate $40,000-60,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner Exhibited New York, Hauser & Wirth, Sensitive Geometries. Brazil 1950s-1980s, September 12-October 26, 2013 (another example exhibited)

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At the age of twelve, Anna Maria Maiolino escaped with her family from post-war Italy and immigrated to Venezuela where she lived until she was eighteen. From there, she relocated to Brazil where she would establish her career as an artist. These drastic cultural and situational changes provoked in Maiolino a desire to represent her personal experience through her work: the sense of being an emigré and therefore belonging nowhere. Maiolino articulates this feeling through constructed objects consisting of layered sheets, cuts, folds, and tears to represent her sense of geographical non-belonging. When she arrived in Brazil during the 1960s, her early works consisted of wood engravings and xylography that exemplifed feelings of loss and absence. This series of woodcuts infuenced her later work, which was also informed by Minimalist, Conceptual and Structuralist practices. The present lot is a prime example of these conceptually intricate and intimate works on paper. Maiolino was always intrigued by the concept of volume: the absent and concealed spaces on the reverse side of sheets of paper. Maiolino explored this idea by literally cutting into the work to reveal negative space, as evidenced by the present lot. In revealing the area behind the paper, she is constructing spatiality and allowing absence to be physically incorporated into the work, thus adding three-dimensionality. More importantly, this construction of spatiality represents her split existence. It proposes the existence of fullness in void, ultimately giving her a sense of wholeness, allowing her to overcome her divided existence.

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“Art is my way of understanding the world.” Lygia Pape

Property From an Important Private Collection

11. Lygia Pape

Brazil 1927-2004

Escultura (Sculpture) signed and dated “Lygia Pape - 1965” on the underside acrylic on wood 19 3/4 x 19 3/4 x 4 1/4 in. (50.2 x 50.2 x 10.8 cm) Executed in 1965. Estimate $400,000-600,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner Alternative angle of the present lot

We are grateful to the Projeto Lygia Pape for their kind assistance in cataloguing this work.

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Frank Stella, Point of Pines, 1959. Enamel on canvas, 84 3/4 x 109 1/8 in. (215. 3 x 277. 2 cm) © 2016 Frank Stella / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Lygia Pape was a pioneering artist in virtually every stage of her long career. In the early 1950s she joined the Rio de Janeiro Frente group, which together with Ruptura in São Paulo, was one of the early exponents of constructivist oriented and concrete art in Brazil. A signatory to the Neoconcrete Manifesto of 1959, Pape’s Tecelares series from that period could be described as having, what Yves-Alain Bois defned as, pseudomorphic relations with contemporaneous works by Frank Stella. That is to say, their respective works, composed of black backgrounds and sequential geometric patterns formed by thin white lines, resemble each other to the point of being almost indistinguishable. However, neither artist was aware of the other’s work and, more importantly, their individual processes, both intellectual and material, remain quite distinct. In the case of Pape’s Tecelares, the medium was not enamel on canvas but woodcut prints. As Paulo Herkenhof argued, in the catalogue for Pape’s posthumous international retrospective exhibition Magnitized Space, woodcut prints had until then been associated with Brazilian expressionist artists, with the popular aesthetics of folk-imagery and craf. Thus to compose patterns according to the laws of Gestalt psychology in this culturally charged medium represented a considerable transgression from the premises of geometric abstraction, particularly those professed by concrete art.

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Hélio Oiticica, B11 Box Bólide 09, 1964. Wood, glass and pigment, 19 1/ 2 x 19¾ x 13 1/ 3 in. (49.5 x 50.2 x 34.7 cm), Tate Collection © Projeto Hélio Oiticica.

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Still during her participation within the neoconcrete movement she adopted a creative strategy that today could be understood as trans-media, one that is more commonly associated with conceptual art. Her series of ‘books’, for example, cannot be understood under the traditional sense of the term since they consisted of sequential displays of reliefs in wood or objects in paper or card that did not contain words but were formed of geometric confgurations, suggesting but never entirely revealing a narrative. Later, following the dissolution of the neoconcrete group her work would shif towards the abject, as art historian Fernanda Pequeno argued, in a manner that approached Georges Bataille’s notion of the Informe. Order and disgust are thus juxtaposed in a similar transgressive procedure as had taken place with the discrepancy between the woodcut technique and the sophistication of geometric form, or with her extrapolation the book format. Pape has been described by Ronaldo Brito in his renowned survey Neoconcretism: climax and rupture of the Brazilian contructivist project as participating within the disruptive faction of the movement together with fellow artists Hélio Oiticica and Lygia Clark. Similarly to these artists, Pape too produced postneoconcrete participatory works with strong public/ popular engagement. Her best known work in this vein being ‘Divisor’ of 1968, which consisted of a large sheet with intermittent slits through which people would insert their heads, providing an uncanny experience of bodily separation with the self and relation with one another. Yet unlike her fellow transgressors she also became involved in the production of short experimental flms that had strong associations with the emerging underground cinema movement that appeared in the wake of Brazilian cinema novo.

One of the principle precepts of neoconcretism, as argued by the group’s spokesman Ferreira Gullar in his Theory of the Non-Object (1959), was the ambivalence in relation to traditional disciplines or categorisations of art works. For Gullar, with neoconcrete art, the domains of painting and sculpture converged. In Pape’s Sculpture, had it not been for the work’s title, it would indeed be difcult to determine whether this is a painting, a relief or – and why not? – a sculpture. Such indeterminacy was articulated by Gullar in his neoconcrete critique, drawing on phenomenology and in anticipation to minimalism, with regard to the relation that a work possesses with its surrounding space and how that afects the viewer. Indeed, the diferent planes in Pape’s Sculpture, the conjunction of its geometrical confguration and the white surfaces intersected by black perpendicular planes, proposes distinct visual experiences according to the position of the viewer vis-à-vis his/her position in the gallery space. Such a phenomenological emphasis involves time: the time in which one perceives the object in space, the time necessary for the viewer’s dislocation around the art object. Time had been one of Pape’s themes in her ‘Book of Creation’ (1959) and in her Book of Time (1961-63). The individual ‘pages’ of the latter, all based on square confgurations, do indeed possess strong afnities with the work presented here which consists of intersecting one square with another (half) square placed at 45° and on another plane as if having been opened up, revealing its inner or lower layer. Like Pape’s ‘books’, we may think of these geometric confgurations symbolically. Afer all, it is through the intersections between art theory, the artist’s own creative trajectory, the work’s relation as well as its diferentiation with those of her contemporaries, that one is assured of the art historical signifcance of a work such as Sculpture. Michael Asbury, PhD

If the Tecelares series appeared at a transitory point between the Frente and neoconcrete afliations, the work presented here, Sculpture (1965), stands at another pivotal moment in Pape’s trajectory, between the neoconcrete and participatory or experimental stages described above. The work displays characteristics that are neoconcrete in nature with strong afnities with the processes and aesthetics of her fellow artists, although never derivative nor imitative.

Sol Lewitt, Incomplete Cube 5/2, 1974. Painted aluminum, 40 x 40 x 40 in. (101.6 x 101.6 x 101.6 cm) © 2015 The LeWitt Estate / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

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12. Jorge Eielson

Peru 1924 - 2006

Amazonía signed, titled and dated “Amazonia - 1999 - J. Eielson” on the reverse knotted cotton fabric on painted canvas stretched over panel Diameter: 28 1/2 in. (72.4 cm) Executed in 1999. Estimate $20,000-30,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

The present lot, Amazonía (1999), belongs to Jorge Eielson’s most important body of work in which he references his heritage and continues his rigorous investigation of color, science and conceptual art. In the late 1940s, Eielsen emigrated from his native Peru to Paris, later settling in Italy where he immersed himself in the cosmopolitan social circles of artists like Alberto Burri, Cy Twombly and the MADI group. These relationships contributed greatly to the development of his artistic language. Eielson’s main concern was breaking away from fat planes and two-dimensional objects as a means of creating a visual lexicon completely independent from his peers. This rupture is evident in Amazonía, a work from his quipus series. The term quipus, from the native Inca language of Quechua, refers to a Pre-Columbian counting system that used a variety of colored knots to methodically record information. Eielson utilized canvas and other fabrics, which he twisted into diferent knots as a means to allude to his Peruvian heritage. Notably, this juxtaposition of knots on painted canvases also reveals his understanding of pictorial form and color. Amazonía and other works from this series spearheaded the development of a visual language evolving into a myriad of variations on a single motif, that of the quipus, which catapulted him to the forefront of international modernism.

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13. Willys de Castro

Brazil 1926-1988

Untitled signed, dedicated and dated “WILLYS DE CASTRO 1957/58” on the reverse gouache on collaged paper on cardboard 3 1/2 x 12 1/4 in. (8.9 x 31.1 cm) Executed in 1957 - 1958. Estimate $60,000-80,000 Provenance Collection of Monica Filgueiras, São Paulo (gifed from the artist and Hércules Barsotti) Acquired from the above by the present owner

Willys de Castro was a painter, printmaker, draughtsman, graphic artist and stage designer. He studied industrial design and chemistry until 1948 and later enrolled in an apprenticeship in graphic arts. In 1954 de Castro founded an advertising consultancy Estúdios de Projetos Gráfcos (Graphic Studio Project) with the artist Hércules Barsotti. The present lot was gifed to the gallerist Monica Filgueiras, and is an important example of his early works that relates closely to a work in the permanent collection of the Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo. These early works would later inform his highly experimental and iconic series Objetos ativos (Active Objects) that questioned the pictorial role of the canvas by exploring the possibilities of two-dimensional planes and volume. De Castro joined Grupo Neoconcretista in Rio de Janeiro in 1969 and soon became a leading fgure. Ultimately, his early works, exemplifed in the present work lot and the Objetos ativos series created a pioneering precedence for future minimalist works, stretching the boundaries of two-dimensional painting and geometric abstraction.

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Willys de Castro, Untitled, 1957-8. Gouache on collaged paper on cardboard, 23 1/ 2 x 23 1/ 2 in. (59.8 x 59.8 cm), Pinacoteca do Estado doe São Paulo, Donated by Hércules Barsotti, 2001, Courtesy of Acervco da Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo

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14. Mathias Goeritz

Germany / Mexico 1915-1990

Mensaje signed, titled and dated “MENSAJE - MGoeritz - 1961” on the reverse gold leaf on wood 20 1/2 x 20 1/2 x 2 3/4 in. (52 x 52 x 7 cm) Executed in 1961. Estimate $80,000-120,000 Provenance Collection of Anita Brenner, Mexico City (acquired from the artist) Thence by descent to Estate of Susannah Glusker Acquired from the above by the present owner

Anita Brenner (1905-1974) was a luminary in the Mexican art world in the twentieth century. Her frst book Idols Behind Altars, published in 1929, was a resounding success, illuminating Mexican art from pre-conquest through the 1920s. As a MexicanAmerican—with one foot in each country—she was able facilitate strong connections between Mexico’s most revered contemporary artists and important fgures in the New York art world, such as José Clemente Orozco with Alma Reed, who would facilitate his frst exhibition in the United States. Through these connections, Brenner built a remarkable collection with beautiful works such as the present lot by Mathias Goeritz, a stunning piece from his mensaje series in an unusual round shape invoking the powerful glow of the sun.

Tina Modotti, Portrait D’Anita Brenner, circa 1925

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Alternative angle of the present lot

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15. Leonora Carrington

Great Britain / Mexico 1917 - 2011

Untitled signed and dated “1959 Leonora” lower edge oil, lace, sewing thread and metal wire on canvas 16 1/8 x 16 1/8 in. (41 x 41 cm) Executed in 1959. Estimate $100,000-150,000 Provenance Collection of Anita Brenner, Mexico City (acquired from the artist) Thence by descent to Estate of Susannah Glusker Acquired from the above by the present owner We would like to thank Dr. Salomon Grimberg for his kind assistance in cataloguing this work.

Carrington’s enigmatic paintings were infuenced by children’s tales such as Alice in Wonderland, English Fairy Tales and The Arabian Nights. These stories populated Carrington’s imagination with princesses and nocturnal creatures such as cats and enchantresses. In the 1950s, when Carrington moved to Mexico, she immersed herself in the study of alchemy and the occult that she transposed into a repertoire of animals and symbols in her works. At this time, Carrington began experimenting with assorted media including polychrome wood sculptures, tapestries, as well as hand-sewing and embroidery. One important work from this experimental phase is Carrington’s arresting Cat Woman (La Grande Dame) from 1951. The present lot, Untitled (1959), is reminiscent not only of the 1951 sculpture but also of Carroll’s Cheshire cat that appeared to Alice. This work is sufused with fantastical and surreal elements, such as the hand sewn lace around the cat’s face and the wires used to symbolize whiskers, which also become sheet music flled with notes, imbuing the piece with a lyrical quality. In Mexico, Carrington formed an enduring friendship with Remedios Varo, with whom she met almost daily in her home flled with cats. Carrington believed Varo’s home had a magical atmosphere and it undoubtedly infuenced the symbols and iconography she depicted in her works. During this time, her life was also entwined with Edward James, the renowned Surrealist collector.

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James was investing his fortune in the construction of an extraordinary open air sanctuary for animals in the tropical jungle of Xilitla. He invited Carrington to paint the murals of this sanctuary that came to represent, for Carrington, the incarnation of Alice in Wonderland. Not surprisingly, the animal world became a recurrent theme in her work, as in this remarkable cat. This period in Carrington’s work was also infuenced by Coptic and Eastern Medieval fgurative art, as seen in the red and white dots throughout the surface of the present lot, which represent the tree of life, known for its white and red berries that bestow immortality. More importantly, this work refects Carrington’s feeling for animals as stated in a letter, “If gods exist, I don’t believe they have human form: I prefer to envision deities with the appearance of zebras, cats, or birds. Love guides all these species: only man makes a deity of Hate with his wars, his puritanism, the oppressions against his own species and the nature around him” (Seán Kissane, Leonora Carrington – Irish Museum of Modern Art, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, 2013, p. 89). Ultimately, when confronted with this powerful and beguiling creature, we are reminded that there is no key to easily decipher Carrington’s work, yet this sculptural painting attests to her innovative pictorial language, ensuring her place as one of the most important Surrealist painters from the twentieth century.

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The Collection of Natalie R. & Eugene S. Jones

Forty years ago, Natalie R. and Eugene S. Jones acquired a painting that would become the cornerstone of their collection. This painting, Portrait of Marevna (1916) by Diego Rivera, became a source of deep fascination for both Mr. and Mrs. Jones. Not only did the couple build a comprehensive library on the artist, but they spent painstaking hours investigating this beguiling portrait. Their method of collecting—meticulous, thoughtful and thoroughly researched—mirrored their approach to lifelong careers as renowned foreign correspondents and documentary flm producers. Upon meeting Eugene Jones, his passion for this exceptional artwork and his endearing respect for his late wife, Natalie, are both equally infectious and radiate from him as he speaks of their lives together. Eugene and Natalie Jones met in 1950 and were married within a year. The pair have been recognized on numerous occasions for their contributions to the feld of reporting, covering important historical moments—both wars and political stories—in various global hotspots from Egypt to communist Russia, Vietnam to Afghanistan, Korea to Mexico, and everywhere in between . The two have been awarded or nominated for almost every major motion picture honor—from an Oscar to an Emmy—for their feature length documentary flms and innovative network television programs. They are known not only for documenting the stories of famous fgures, such as John F. Kennedy and Sophia Loren, but also those of ordinary people who are ofen lef out of the history books, demonstrating their penchant for generosity and philanthropy.

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In order to get to the bottom of complex news story, this dynamic duo served under fre in countless dangerous locations. They understood that this adventurous and risk-flled way of life was the only way to uncover the truth, leading to such historic flmed moments as a world-exclusive interview with President Diem in Vietnam in 1956, a near death encounter in Uganda afer capture by Sudanese rebels, and an assignment in Guantanamo Bay just before the Bay of Pigs. Their dedication to their craf truly changed the way documentary flms were made and showcased on television. This devotion was equally apparent in both their relationship with each other—the pair worked together for 52 years—and their love of collecting, which began in their New York apartment, flled with more than 10,000 books, and then traveled with them across country to their home in Los Angeles. It has been a pleasure to come to know Mr. Jones and to represent him in the sale of this masterpiece from Rivera’s early and formative Cubist period. On its 100th birthday, this painting is once again in the public eye afer being cherished for decades in a private collection. The opportunity to showcase this groundbreaking work afer so many years has also necessitated a deeper investigation of its own mysterious history, which comes to light under new scholarship by Professor Luis-Martín Lozano—the leading expert on Diego Rivera—in the following pages. Kaeli Deane Head of Sale, Latin American Art

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Clockwise from top: Photograph of Natalie and Eugene S. Jones in Egypt, 1953 Photograph of Eugene S. Jones with President John F. Kennedy at the White House, 1952 Photograph of Natalie and Eugene S. Jones with a soldier in the Suez War in Egypt, 1953

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Property from the Collection of Natalie R. and Eugene S. Jones O

16. Diego Rivera

Mexico 1887-1959

Retrato de Marevna (Portrait of Marevna) oil on canvas 31 3/4 x 25 1/2 in. (80.6 x 64.8 cm) Painted in 1916. Estimate $800,000-1,200,000 Provenance Collection of Alice Warder Garrett, Evergreen Foundation, Baltimore (acquired directly from the artist in 1916) Sotheby Parke Bernet Inc., New York, Modern Paintings - Drawings - Sculpture, October 22, 1976, lot 374A Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited Phoenix Art Museum, Diego Rivera: The Cubist Years (March 10 - April 29, 1984); then travelled to New York, IBM Gallery of Science and Art (June 13 - August 8, 1984); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (September 27 - November 11, 1984); Mexico City, Museum of Modern Art, (December 6, 1984 - February 11, 1985) Literature Laura Cortés Gutiérrez, Diego Rivera: Catálogo general de obra de caballete, Mexico City: Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, 1989, No. 32, p. 191 (illustrated in black and white) Diego Rivera: The Cubist Years, exh. cat., Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, 1984, p. 128 (illustrated) We are grateful to Professor Luis-Martín Lozano for his kind assistance in cataloguing this work.

“Every good composition is above all a work of abstraction. All good painters know this. But the painter cannot dispense with subjects altogether without his work sufering impoverishment.” Diego Rivera

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Marevna, Self Portrait, 1929. Oil on canvas, 8 5/8 x 10 5/8 in. (22 x 27 cm), Musée du Petit Palais, Paris © 2016 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.

Between the years of 1912 and 1917, Mexican artist Diego Rivera enjoyed a fruitful career as a Cubist painter in Paris. His serious work as a theorist and as an exponent of Cubism led him to emerge as a distinctive member of the vanguard movement and a contemporary of Pablo Picasso, Jean Metzinger and Gino Severini. Afer beginning his artistic studies at the Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes in Mexico City as an academic painter well-versed in the Modernist and Post-Impressionist movements, Rivera perfected his studies in Spain between 1907 and 1909; briefy returning to Mexico and then back to Europe in 1911 to open his studio in Montparnasse, where he began experimenting with Divisionism under the infuence of Georges Seurat. Rivera conceived his frst Cubist compositions during the winter of 1912, evolving from the Mannerist paintings of El Greco (Doménikos Theotokópoulus) and went on to exhibit some of these works at the autumn salon in Paris. Rivera’s Cubism followed a path that led from the early infuences of Robert Delaunay’s Orphism and Italian Futurism to his own characteristically complex formal language. He incorporated textures achieved with sand and cork and a rich Orphic chromatic palette—which his detractors considered savage and primitive—until it arrived at the conception of enveloping compositional spaces including extremely dynamic centrifugal and centripetal energies.

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Around the year 1916, Diego Rivera began to refne his Cubism towards a more purist abstraction of austere geometric shapes, as seen in this portrait, which was incorrectly catalogued as a portrait of Angeline Belof for decades. In reality, this painting is a portrait of another Russian painter, Marie Bronislava Vorobyeva-Stebelska, “Marevna” (1892-1984), whom Riviera met around the year 1915 as a result of their mutual friendship with the poet Ilya Ehrenburg. Rivera had a passionate afair with Marvena, which although ephemeral, produced a daughter named Marika. On the other hand, Rivera maintained his romantic attachment with the painter Angeline Belof (1879-1969) from the time he met her in 1909. With Belof, who became his common-law wife, Rivera had a male child, Diegito, who died a few months afer birth. This produced difcult moments of avoidance and rejection in his relationship with his stable romantic partner. It was within this period of instability that Rivera was briefy involved with Marevna, whose savage beauty and overfowing sexual energy—the polar opposite of the serene and maternal presence of Angeline—captivated the Mexican painter, estranging him for a period from the marital relationship he had with Belof between 1911 and 1921.

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This is the second Cubist portrait of three portraits of Marevna created by Rivera. The frst one is in the Art Institute of Chicago’s permanent collection and shares the same characteristic geometric facial features with this second painting. The last one, created in 1917 and known as Mujer sentada en una butaca (Woman sitting in an armchair), is included in the collection of the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes in Mexico City. This present lot—painted in 1916—is a magnifcent work that has only been held in two private collections, since it was acquired directly from the painter, and evidences to what point Rivera had managed to strip himself from any decorative and accessory elements in his conception of Cubism. Marevna’s blond hair and fgure are shown from the front and back, rotating on the same central axis, with a chromatic play on blacks versus whites, creating the juxtaposition of grand positive spaces confronted by richly textured dark planes. Thus, Marevna’s mercurial personality, which Rivera found “exciting” but which also defned her as a “she-devil,” is refected in the shifing perspectives of her body—now geometric—with her hands on her hips, shaped as a cube dancing seductively on the canvas surface, growing dynamic and full of energy as a result of Rivera’s compositional talent and the spatial innovations he achieved as a renowned Cubist painter in Paris. Professor Luis-Martín Lozano Art Historian

Photograph of Diego Rivera and Angelina Belof , Paris 1911. Courtesy of Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Coordinación de Difusión Cultural

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Photograph of Diego Rivera in his Paris studio, 1915.

Entre los años de 1912 y 1917, el artista mexicano Diego Rivera tuvo una fructífera carrera como pintor cubista en París. Su trabajo serio como teórico y exponente del cubismo lo llevó a destacar como un miembro propositivo de la vanguardia, contemporáneo a Pablo Picasso, Jean Metzinger y Gino Severini. Habiéndose iniciado en la Escuela Nacional de Bellas Artes como un pintor académico, conocedor de los modernismos y postimpresionismos, Rivera perfeccionó sus estudios en España, entre 1907 y 1909; retornando a México, brevemente, sólo para regresar a Europa en 1911 e instalar su estudio en Montparnasse y comenzar a experimentar con el divisionismo bajo la infuencia de Georges Seurat. En el invierno de 1912 concibió sus primeras composiciones cubistas, evolucionando del estudio de la pintura manierista de Doménikos Theotokópoulus, El Greco, y mostrando algunos de esos avances en el Salón de Otoño de París. El cubismo de Rivera recorrió un camino que lo llevó de tempranas infuencias con el simultaneismo de Robert Delaunay y del futurismo italiano, a un complejo lenguaje formal propio, explorando con la incorporación de texturas logradas con arenas y corcho, además de una rica paleta cromática órfca—que sus detractores encontraban salvaje y primitiva—, hasta llegar a la concepción de espacios compositivos envolventes, con fuerzas centrífugas y centrípetas de gran dinamismo.

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Para el año de 1916, Rivera comenzó a depurar su cubismo, alineándolo hacia una abstracción más purista de volúmenes geométricos austeros, tal como se aprecia en este retrato que ha sido erróneamente catalogado como de Angeline Belof. En realidad se trata de otra pintora rusa, Marie Bronislava Vorobyeva-Stebelska, “Marvena” (1892-1984), a quien Rivera conoció hacia el año de 1915, por medio de la amistad mutua con el poeta Ilya Ehrenburg. Con Marvena, Rivera llegaría a sostener un apasionado afaire, que aun cuando efímero, tuvo como resultado una hija, llamada Marika. Por el contrario, con la pintora Angeline Belof (1879-1969), Rivera había sostenido vínculos amorosos desde que la conoció en 1909; con ella concibió un hijo varón, quien falleció a los pocos meses de nacido, por lo que su relación con su compañera estable pasó por momentos difíciles, de evasión y rechazo. Fue en ese contexto de inestabilidad que Diego Rivera se involucró durante un breve periodo con Marevna, cuya personalidad de belleza salvaje y energía sexual desbordante—de sumo opuesta a la presencia serena y maternal de Angeline—, cautivó al pintor mexicano, alejándolo de la relación de matrimonio que siempre sostuvo con Belof, entre 1911 y 1921. Este es el segundo retrato cubista, de tres que le hiciera Rivera a Marevna: el primero es colección del Art Institute de Chicago y comparte con este segundo los mismos rasgos, inequívocos, del rostro geométrico;

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Diego Rivera, Portrait of Marevna, 1915. Oil on canvas, 57 3/8 x 44 3/8 in. (145.7 x 44 3/8 in), The Art Institute of Chicago, Alfred Stieglitz Collection, gif of Georgia O’Keefe© 2016 Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico, D.F. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Diego Rivera, Woman Sitting in an Armchair (Mujer sentada en una butaca),1917. Oil on canvas, 51 1/ 2 x 38 1/ 2 in. (130.8 x 97.8 cm), Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, Mexico City© 2016 Banco de México Diego Rivera Frida Kahlo Museums Trust, Mexico, D.F. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

el último, de 1917 y conocido como Mujer sentada en una butaca es colección del Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes y se encuentra en México. Este segundo retrato, del año de 1916, es una magnífca pieza que ha estado tan sólo en dos colecciones particulares desde que fue adquirida directamente al pintor, y muestra hasta que grado Rivera había logrado despojarse de todo elemento decorativo y accesorio en su concepción del cubismo: la rubia cabellera y media fgura de Marevna se muestra en anverso y reverso, girando sobre un mismo eje central, en un juego cromático de negros versus blancos, creando una yuxtaposición de amplios espacios positivos que se confrontan con planos oscuros de ricas texturas; de manera que el carácter casquivano de la personalidad de Marvena, que Rivera encontraba “excitante” pero que a la vez defnía como “endemoniada”, se ve refejado en el bamboleo de su cuerpo, ahora geométrico, con las manos a la cintura, en la forma de un cubo que baila seductor sobre la superfcie de un lienzo; el cual ahora se vuelve dinámico y pletórico de energía, gracias al dominio compositivo e innovaciones espaciales que Rivera alcanzó como un connotado pintor cubista en París. Profesor Luis-Martín Lozano Historiador del Arte

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17. Diego Rivera

Mexico 1887-1959

Dancer signed “Diego Rivera” lower right watercolor on paper 15 3/8 x 11 in. (39.1 x 27.9 cm) Executed circa 1939. Estimate $15,000-20,000 Provenance Finch College, New York Collection of Ames Brown, New York Private Collection, Miami We are grateful to Professor Luis-Martín Lozano for his kind assistance in cataloguing this work.

18. Cândido Portinari

Brazil 1903-1962

Colheita de Café (Cofee Harvest) inscribed “Declaro que este projeto e de autoria de meu irmão Candido Portinari” Luiz Portinari; also inscribed “Desenho ejecutado por Protinari (projeto [...] para un Escola Pública em Olavia” with other indistinct inscriptions on the reverse graphite and watercolor on paper 10 5/8 x 13 1/2 in. (27 x 34.3 cm) Executed circa 1933. Estimate $70,000-100,000 Provenance Collection of Sylvia Kowarick, São Paulo Private Collection, New York Literature Candido Portinari and João Candido Portinari, ed., Candido Portinari: catálogo raisonné - catalogue raisonné, Rio de Janeiro, 2004, no. 349, p. 237 (illustrated)

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Cândido Portinari is considered one of Brazil’s most important neo-realist painters. He was born in Santa Rosa, a small town in the outskirts of São Paulo known for its cofee plantations. At an early age Portinari became the assistant to an artist commissioned to decorate the local church. Recognizing the young painter’s natural ability, the older artist persuaded Portinari’s parents to send him to the National School of Fine Arts in Rio de Janeiro, where he enrolled at the age of 15. During this time Portinari produced an important body of work that eventually earned him a scholarship to study in Paris in 1928. While in Europe, Portinari absorbed the many artistic styles he experienced, from Renaissance frescoes to Picasso’s Cubism. Interestingly, during this time he scarcely produced any works, for which he was harshly criticized, and in 1930 he returned to Brazil. In 1933, Portinari returned to his birthplace and began an incredibly prolifc and pivotal moment in his career.

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The present lot, Colheita de Café (Cofee Harvest), circa 1933, alludes to a subject matter he would continually explore throughout his oeuvre: life in the land of cofee plantations. Although Portinari depicts the landscape and workers in poverty, his paintings do not emanate a feeling of misery or hardship, but rather depict a faithful representation of the world through his own pictorial style. The rounded bodies impress on us a physicality the artist’s innate understanding of volume – somewhat reminiscent of the Diego Rivera’s mural fgures – with somber hues that subtly dramatize the nature of the scene.

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19. Alfredo Ramos Martínez

Mexico 1871-1946

La mujercita signed “Ramos Martínez” upper right. tempera, charcoal and pastel on newsprint on board 21 1/2 x 16 1/2 in. (54.6 x 41.9 cm) Painted circa 1930. Estimate $50,000-70,000 Provenance Husberg Gallery, Sedona Private Collection Sotheby’s, New York, Latin American Art, November 20, 2007, lot 3 Acquired from the above sale by the present owner Literature This work will be included in the forthcoming Alfredo Ramos Martínez: Catalogue Raisonné of the Paintings to be published by the Alfredo Ramos Martínez Research Project.

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20. Rufno Tamayo

Mexico 1899-1991

Hombre y mano pencil on paper 10 5/8 x 14 in. (27 x 35.6 cm) Executed circa 1930. Estimate $15,000-20,000 Provenance Galería Antonio Souza, Mexico City Collection of Roberta Bernard Treadway Gallery, Oak Park Acquired from the above by the present owner We are grateful to Juan Carlos Pereda for his kind assistance in cataloguing this work.

Please note this work is a study for the mural Revolución that Tamayo painted in 1938 for the former National Museum of Anthropology and History, now the Museum of Cultures in Mexico City.

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21. Martín Ramírez

Mexico 1895 - 1963

Untitled (Brown Fawn) mixed media on paper 22 1/2 x 20 in. (57.2 x 50.8 cm) Executed circa 1960 - 1963. Estimate $60,000-80,000 Provenance Collection of Dr. Max Dunievitz, Auburn (acquired directly from the artist) Thence by descent to Collection of Phil Dunievitz, Auburn Ricco-Maresca Gallery, New York Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited Madrid, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Martín Ramírez: Reframing Confnement, March 30 - July 12, 2010 Literature Brooks Davis Anderson, Martín Ramírez, The Last Works, San Francisco, 2008, p. 75 (illustrated) L. Cooke, Martín Ramírez: Reframing Confnement, Madrid, 2010, p. 133 (illustrated)

Martín Ramírez lef his hometown of Jalisco to move to the United States in 1925 in search of work. Found later on the streets of a California city, homeless and unable to communicate, he was committed to a psychiatric hospital. Ramírez was diagnosed as a catatonic schizophrenic and spent the rest of his life in diferent psychiatric wards in California. During this difcult period, he produced an impressive body of drawings that allowed him to express himself and the world in which he found himself trapped. He began with pencils that were given to him by the hospital staf, and then slowly he started incorporating scraps of paper, which he glued together with a variety of substances such as mashed potatoes, bread, water and saliva. During the 1950s, a professor from Sacramento State College named Tarmo Pasto, who was at the time investigating mental illness and creativity, was impressed by Ramírez’s talent and began promoting his art. Although Ramírez is ofen categorized as an outsider artist, his work has infuenced notable artists such as Wayne Thiebaud. Ramírez’s drawings introduce us to a series of noteworthy characters and scenes that document his life experiences. He depicted mounted caballeros, Mexican Madonnas, cowboys and a variety of astonishing animals, such as the fawn in the present lot. An indelible aspect of his work is the unique concept of pictorial space that Ramírez evokes through an arrangement of curved and parallel lines, giving viewers the illusion that space is expanding and contracting. Ramírez places his characters inside this original arrangement of lines that become prosceniums and stages, alluding to themes of distance, separation and isolation. Ultimately his forms and palette reveal an exigent and complex pictorial vocabulary, which attests to his genial drafsmanship and remind us that we are just beginning to comprehend and appreciate this remarkable artist’s work. There will be an exhibition of Martín Ramírez at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles in fall 2017, as part of the Getty Foundation’s Pacifc Standard Time: LA/LA.

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22. Francisco Narváez

Venezuela 1905-1982

Cabeza de negro signed “Narvaez” upper lef corner of base carved ebony 20 x 9 x 8 3/4 in. (50.8 x 22.9 x 22.2 cm) Executed in 1935, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity from the Authenticity Committee from the Estate of Francisco Narváez. Estimate $70,000-90,000 Provenance Collection of Carlos Parra Belloso, Caracas (acquired from the artist in 1949) Acquired from the above by the present owner

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23. Oswaldo Guayasamín

Ecuador 1919-1999

El Grito signed “Guayasamín” upper right oil on canvas 26 7/8 x 40 1/2 in. (68.3 x 102.9 cm) Painted in 1976, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity signed by the artist. Estimate $60,000-80,000 Provenance Collection of Ernesto de Lemos, Quito (acquired from the artist in 1976) Acquired from the above by the present owner

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“There’s a moment in painting when everything must be stalked; either the work will be killed, or it will be born.” Wifredo Lam

24. Wifredo Lam

Cuba 1902-1982

Midnight signed and dated “Wi Lam 1962” lower lef oil on canvas 49 3/4 x 43 3/8 in. (126.4 x 110.2 cm) Painted in 1962, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Lou Laurin-Lam. Estimate $450,000-650,000 Provenance Albert Loeb Gallery, New York Pyramid Galleries, Washington DC Acquired from the above from the above by the present owner Exhibited Paris, Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris, V Salon de Grands et Jeunes d’aujourd’hiu, hommage à Jean Cocteau, 1963-1964 Literature L. Lam, Wifredo Lam - Catalogue Raisonné of the Painted Work, Vol. 2 1961 - 1982, 2006, p. 262, No. 62.28 (illustrated in black and white) E. Jaguer, Les armes miraculeuses de Wifredo Lam, Art International, IX, Lugano, June 1965, no. 5, p. 22 (illustrated in black and white)

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Lam in his studio in front of Les Enfants sans ame and Le Sabbat, Albissola, 1964.

“I have made the journey of Christopher Columbus in reverse,” Lam remarked in 1972,” from the Antilles to Liguria.” His transatlantic crossings had begun a halfcentury earlier, when he frst lef Havana for Madrid in 1923, and shaped his practice in the intervening decades as he traveled from Paris to Martinique, Caracas to New York. The most internationally acclaimed artist of Cuba’s historical vanguardia, Lam traveled betwixt the Paris of Picasso and the Afro-Cuban rituals of the island, imaging the strange and surreal confuences of Western and “primitive” cultures in paintings—famously, The Jungle (1943)—that probed the colonial past and present. He lef the revolutionary tumult in Cuba in April 1958 and eventually settled between Zurich and Albissola, where he found respite in the mild Mediterranean climes and entered a period of retrospection in his work. Warmly received by the community of artists there, he embarked on new experiments with printmaking and ceramics and celebrated the birth of his sons Eskil (1961) and Timour (1962). “Albissola, a traditional centre of Italian ceramics, was a hub of excitement, activity and artistic exchange at the time my father was there,” Eskil has recalled. “My mother called it ‘Albissolamania.’ She remembers one occasion when [Enrico] Baj and [Sergio] Dangelo, together with [Lucio] Fontana, Roberto Crippa and Piero Manzoni, came to welcome them of a train from Paris, reciting poetry and handing them enormous panettoni.”

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The Albissola years saw new distillations of his iconography, the mythology of familiar characters— orishas, femmes-cheval—rendered in increasingly clarifed visual forms. “Now [Lam’s] color is cleaner,” James Johnson Sweeney wrote of his painting from this period, “the elements of his composition swim clear against the grounds that are always laden with hints, suggestions…which grow directly out of the medium itself and its application—not arbitrary conventions with readily legible forms.” This refnement is seen in such works as Près des Îles Vierges (1959) and Les enfants sans âme (1964) as well as in Midnight, in which minimally drawn fgures materialize out of a tenebrous ground. “While cubism and surrealism were essential to the development of his style, his painting was always something on its own, and even more so in the later years—the work is more abstract, the hybrid fgures more menacing,” his son Eskil observed. “By the time he’s in Albissola, you tend to see monochrome backgrounds with hardly any detail, ofen just a simple wash—everything becomes concentrated in the line.”

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Midnight is an elegant example of Lam’s painting during this time and its slippages between fgure and ground, syncretic and rhetorical bodies. A variation of the rarefed femme-cheval motif predominant in his work since the late 1940s, the central fgure rises gracefully in space, her equine neck slender and seductive. Its arching, attenuated form is echoed in the spike that protrudes from her back and in the almost incorporeal tail that dissolves into an outlined form suggestive of the deity Eleggua, identifed by his round head and horns; traces of his body hover to the right, his presence multiple and occult. A personifcation of ritual possession in the Afro-Cuban religion of Lucumí, or Santería, which Lam studied as a child with his godmother, the femme-cheval embodies the carnality of the feminine body and its transgressive prowess. Dimly luminous, Midnight evokes the darkness of the witching hour in velvety washes of pigment that envelop its subject, her fgure receding into and out of the shadowy ground, within and beyond this world. Abigail McEwan, PhD

Alberto Giacometti, Portrait of Annette, 1949. Oil on canvas, 19 3/4 x 14 1/4 in. (50.2 x 36.2 cm), Museum of Modern Art, New York © 2016 Alberto Giacometti Estate/Licensed by VAGA and ARS, New York, NY.

Max Ernst, Untitled (The Bird People) from VVV Portfolio, 1942. Crayon on paper from a portfolio of fve etchings, 15 7/8 x 13 1/8 in. (40.3 x 33.3 cm), Museum of Modern Art, New York © 2016 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris.

1. Wifredo Lam, quoted in Lorenzo Vicenti, “Mi credevano lo stregone che beve sangue,” Oggi Illustrato 25 (July 17, 1972): 86-88, quoted in Lowery Stokes Sims, Wifredo Lam and the International Avant-Garde, 1923-1982 (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2002), 165. 2. Eskil Lam, “Wifredo Lam: The Albissola Years,” Tate Etc. 38 (Autumn 2016), http://www.tate.org.uk/contextcomment/articles/wifredo-lam-albissola-years. 3. James Johnson Sweeney, Wifredo Lam (South Bend, Ind.: University of Notre Dame Art Gallery, 1961), n.p. 4. Eskil Lam, “Wifredo Lam: The Albissola Years.”

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Edge. Plane. Color.

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From lef to right, Salvador Corratgé, Luís Martínez Pedro, Loló Soldevilla, José Rosabal, Pedro de Oraá and Sandú Darié.

Cuban Concretism Lots 25–34

A revolutionary movement avant la lettre, Concrete art emerged in Cuba during the 1950s at the behest of a valiant and resourceful local avant-garde that participated in transatlantic dialogues around abstraction and fostered a climate of modernity at home. The concretos pitched their work both in national terms—as a new chapter of Cuba’s historical vanguardia, which had blazed a trail for modern art since 1927—and, aspirationally, as a measure of the country’s synchronicity with the international avant-garde. Led by the early experiments and advocacy of the Romanian émigré Sandú Darié and the noted Havana School painters Mario Carreño and Luis Martínez Pedro, the rise of Cuban Concretism mirrored the cosmopolitan outlook of the decade, distilled in the universalism and idealism of geometric form. This refnement is exemplifed in two of Carreño’s paintings from the early 1950s, in which angular geometries betray local points of origin—expressive color and tactile brushstrokes, shapes resonant of Afro-Cuban iconography—but already look ahead to the Concrete paradigm that soon began to take hold. The return of Loló Soldevilla from Paris brought greater awareness of the historical Constructivist legacy, and her opening of the Galería Color-Luz (with Pedro de Oraá) provided Cuba’s concretos a space of resistance—to the Batista dictatorship, in power since 1952—and for exhibition. The eponymous debut of Los Diez Pintores Concretos at the gallery in November 1959, just months afer Castro’s revolution, sanctioned the movement and its progressive, social manifesto, even as it sounded its end. Los Diez quietly disbanded two years later, their aesthetics cast aside in the changing of the political guard, yet their work stands testament to the

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modernist project that swept Havana over the decade and to their pursuit of abstraction as a liberal and transformative practice. Notwithstanding Darié’s collaboration with the Gyula Kosice and the Madí group in Buenos Aires, Paris remained the principal point of reference for the concretos and their engagements with historical abstraction. In Las tres gracias, Homenaje a Theo V. Doesburg, Composición No. 7, Soldevilla acknowledges the Dutch artist who introduced the term Concrete art in 1930 to defne works with no basis in the natural world and no symbolic content. The dynamism of her composition, extending through three black circles along a diagonal axis and redirected by a tilted square, resonates with van Doesburg’s own, animated geometry and refects Soldevilla’s immediate response to the School of Paris following her arrival in France in 1949. Also in Paris beginning that year, Wifredo Arcay similarly immersed himself in the ambience of geometric abstraction, joining the collectivist Groupe Espace and advancing collaborative projects from serigraphy to murals. The fattened geometry of Untitled is representative of his early paintings, in which contrasting panes of color are demarcated by a strong, continuous graphic line. The analysis of the Constructivist grid is carried further in Darié’s numerous, red-and-black collaged drawings from this period. In characteristic works such as Untitled, columna espacial, the interstices of the grid are magnifed in layers of lenslike, foating circles, their optical efects changing in each possible orientation (the work is signed in all four corners).

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The diversity of Los Diez may be seen in the work of its younger generation, among them de Oraá, José María Mijares, Salvador Corratgé, and José Rosabal, who took diferently winding paths toward Concretism while working in Havana. A painter and a poet, de Oraá spent the summer of 1957 with Soldevilla in Caracas, and his work bears afnities with the geometría sensível of South America and its latent corporality. The suggestively organic shapes of Untitled foat against a dark ground, mirroring each other in a dance of form and void, positive and negative space. Trained at the Academia de San Alejandro and an early adherent of geometric abstraction, Mijares drew upon the Cubist color and example of Amelia Peláez, with whom he studied, in early paintings such as Untitled, which evokes the fracturing of light through the stained-glass vitrales and mediopuntos of the colonial city. In the brilliant, kaleidoscopic patterning of Lo concreto en rojo, Mijares advances a near-continuous, trawling line that moves in right angles, framing an array of compositional groups that cluster in allusive, architectonic confgurations. Corratgé’s paintings grew progressively bolder during the 1950s, moving toward greater simplifcations of form, line, and color. In Untitled, he shapes geometry in dramatic waves

of white, blue, and black, each feld of color echoing and responding to the others. Rosabal likewise approached Hard-Edge abstraction in his practice, which continues to the present day in New York. In its fat, faceted planes of color, Blanco y negro reprises the angular geometry of his earlier work and the subdued palette of the early days of the revolution. While the memory of Cuba’s concretos faded in the decades that followed, Los Diez have lately reclaimed their place in the transatlantic history of abstraction. Concrete Cuba, a pair of exhibitions at David Zwirner in London and New York (2015 and 2016, respectively), marked the frst comprehensive exhibition of the group outside of Cuba since 1961, and the concretos are increasingly seen in period exhibitions, such as Postwar: Art Between the Pacifc and the Atlantic, 1945-1965 (Munich: Haus der Kunst, 2016). These reappraisals of Concrete Cuban art bear out the extraordinary horizons and politics of abstraction in revolutionary Cuba and, no less, the pioneering legacy of Los Diez. Abigail McEwan, PhD

Clockwise from top: Wifredo Arcay, Fresque “Luza”, 1959. 291/ 2 x 1373/4 f. (9 x 24 m), 54 avenue de Versailles, Paris, France, Courtesy Jérôme Arcay, Photograph © Etienne Bertrand Weill. José María Mijares, Illustration for Origenes: revista de arte y literatura 11, no. 36 (ed. Jose Lezama Lima), 1954, Rare Book Division, Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, Princeton Universtiy Library, Photograph © Princeton University Library. Cover, 10 Pintores Concretos, 9-16 de enero, exh. Brochure, Coordinacion Provincial de Actividades Culturales, Ateneo y Amigos de la Cultura Cubana; Galeria de Matanzas; Biblioteca Publica “Ramon Guiteras,” Matanzas, 1960, Courtesy OAS AMA Art | Museum of the Americas.

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25. Mario Carreño

Cuba 1913-1999

Untitled gouache on paper signed and dated “Carreño-55” lower lef 13 1/4 x 27 in. (33.7 x 68.6 cm) Painted in 1955. Estimate $30,000-50,000 Provenance Private Collection, Montevideo (acquired from the artist) Christie’s, New York, Important Latin American Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture, November 25, 1997, lot 173 Acquired from the above sale by the present owner

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Cuban Concretism

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26. Mario Carreño

Cuba 1913-1999

Untitled signed and dated “Carreño 53” lower right oil on canvas 28 1/8 x 30 in. (71.4 x 76.2 cm) Painted in 1953. Estimate $90,000-120,000 Provenance Collection of Beatriz M. Vázquez, Havana Museo Nacional, Havana La Acacia Gallery, Havana Sotheby’s, New York, Latin American Art, May 29, 1997, lot 139 Acquired from the above sale by the present owner

Arguably the prime mover behind the phenomenal rise of “Concrete Cuba,” Carreño was a charismatic, public champion of abstraction throughout the 1950s. Among the leaders of the celebrated Havana School, renowned for its color-driven expressions of the vernacular landscape a decade earlier, he had already begun to turn toward geometry by the time of his return to Cuba, following an extended sojourn in New York, in late 1951. “My humble ‘guajiros’ [peasants] followed the geometric trend,” Carreño explained of this new direction in his work. “Everything led to the square.”1 With fellow concretos Sandú Darié and Luis Martínez Pedro, he founded the magazine Noticias de Arte (1952-53) and used his editorial platform to advocate for the place of abstraction within the trajectory of modern Cuban art. His paintings from this decade manifest his belief in abstraction and its universal horizons, and they anticipated the consolidation of the movement at the end of the decade by the group of artists known as “Los Diez Pintores Concretos.”

and crescent moon shapes seen in the present work. “This painter expresses his artistic emotion with color on the physical space of the surface of the canvas, defning his basic forms and arranging them with a constructive sense in vertical and horizontal directions,” Darié continued. “Familiar with optical pictorial phenomena, and with the psychological behavior before colors of certain light vibrations caused by a marvelous texture, Mario Carreño succeeds in expressing his artistic intuition under rationalized control.”2 That balance between order and emotion is sensitively calibrated in the present lot, in which rectangles in variegated, primary tones of red, yellow, and blue foat against a resonant azure ground, suspended in a grid of vertical lines. The abstraction is both constructive and intuitive in kind, its universalism connected to modernist aesthetics, stretching back to Kandinsky’s color theory, and to the national context of Cuba’s vanguardia tradition out of which Carreño had emerged. Abigail McEwan, PhD

“The evolution of his art is guided by our century’s creative dialectic,” Darié wrote in 1957, on the occasion of an exhibition of Carreño’s geometric paintings at Havana’s Palacio de Bellas Artes. “Abstract in view of their intellectual content, nonfgurative because they do not copy reality at all.” Although Carreño disavowed a facile realism, many of his Concrete paintings betray the residual memory of his iconography from the 1940s, particularly its AfroCuban derivation, hinted for example in the triangle

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1. Mario Carreño, quoted in Jesús Fernández Torna, Mario Carreño: Selected Works, 1937–1957 (Miami: Torna & Prado Fine Art Collection, 2012), 333. 2. Sandú Darié, El mundo nuevo de los cuadros de Carreño (Havana: Palacio de Bellas Artes, 1957), n.p.

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Cuban Concretism

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27. Loló Soldevilla

Cuba 1901-1971

Homenaje a Theo V. Doesburg, Composición No. 7, Variación Las Tres Gracias signed and dated “Loló - 50” lower right oil and collage on canvas, laid on wood 13 5/8 x 19 1/2 in. (34.6 x 49.5 cm) Executed in 1950, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Martha Flora Carranza. Estimate $30,000-50,000 Provenance Collection of Mirtha Ibañez, Havana Acquired from the above by the present owner

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28. Wifredo Arcay

Cuba 1925-1997

Untitled signed “Arcay” lower lef oil on canvas 16 1/2 x 20 in. (41.9 x 50.8 cm) Painted circa 1950, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Jerome Arcay. Estimate $30,000-50,000 Provenance Collection of José Antonio Rodríguez Espinosa, Havana Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited New York, David Zwirner, Concrete Cuba, January 7-February 20, 2016

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Cuban Concretism

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29. Sandú Darié

Romania / Cuba 1908-1991

Untitled, (Columna espacial) signed “DARIE” on upper, lower, right and lef edges collage, pencil and ink on paper 11 1/2 x 17 in. (29.2 x 43.2 cm) Executed circa 1950. Estimate $12,000-18,000 Provenance Collection of Enrique Silva, Havana Acquired from the above by the present owner

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30. José Mijares

Cuba 1921-2004

Lo Concreto en rojo signed “Mijares” lower right painted wood 27 1/8 x 35 1/4 in. (68.9 x 89.5 cm) Painted in 1954. Estimate $30,000-50,000 Provenance Cernuda Arte, Coral Gables Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2008 Literature I. Bello, J.R. Britton, A. Kaul, ed., Topics in Contemporary Mathematics, Canada, 2010 (illustrated on the cover) Abigail McEwen, Yale University Press, ed., Revolutionary Horizons: Art and Polemics in 1950s Cuba, New Haven, 2016, p. 146 (illustrated)

Cuban Concretism

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31. José Mijares

Cuba 1921-2004

Untitled signed “Mijares” lower lef oil on wood 34 1/8 x 30 in. (86.7 x 76.2 cm) Painted circa 1950. Estimate $20,000-30,000 Provenance Collection of Orestes Vidal, Havana Tresart Gallery, Miami Private Collection, Caracas Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited New York, David Zwirner, Concrete Cuba, January 7-February 20, 2016 Literature Concrete Cuba: Cuban Geometric Abstraction from the 1950s, exh. cat., David Zwirner, New York, 2016, p. 45 (illustrated)

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32. Pedro de Oraá

Cuba b. 1931

Untitled signed and dated “Oraá 57” lower right caseine on board 29 x 20 7/8 in. (73.7 x 53 cm) Executed in 1957, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by the artist. Estimate $30,000-50,000 Provenance Hortensia Salas Hechevarría, Matanzas Acquired from the above by the present owner

Cuban Concretism

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33. Salvador Corratgé

Cuba 1928-2014

34. José Rosabal

Cuba b. 1935

Untitled signed “S. Corratgé 62” lower right casein on masonite 33 1/4 x 43 in. (84.5 x 109.2 cm) Painted in 1962, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity from Ana González Morejón.

Blanco y negro signed “Rosabal” on the reverse acrylic on canvas 38 7/8 x 23 3/4 in. (98.7 x 60.3 cm) Painted in 2013, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity from the artist.

Estimate $30,000-50,000

Estimate $10,000-15,000

Provenance Private Collection, Havana (acquired from the artist in 1963) Acquired from the above by the present owner

Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

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Cuban Concretism

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35. Manuel Mendive

Cuba b. 1944

Untitled signed “Mendive” lower right acrylic on wood, double sided 65 3/8 x 20 1/4 x 1/4 in. (166.1 x 51.4 x .6 cm) Executed circa 1996, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity signed by the artist. Estimate $15,000-20,000 Provenance Collection of Agustín Drake, Havana (acquired from the artist) Acquired from the above by the present owner

36. Alexandre Arrechea

Cuba b. 1970

Two works: i) Europe ii) At Dusk i) hand-blown glass, sandblasted text, ashes, artist’s metal fxture and metal chain ii) hand-blown glass, tape measure ribbons, artist’s metal fxture and metal chain each sphere: 19 x 19 x 19 in. (48.3 x 48.3 x 48.3 cm) Executed in 2007. Estimate $40,000-60,000 Provenance Magnan Metz Gallery, New York Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited i) New York, Magnan Metz Gallery, Alexandre Arrechea, What Could Happen If I Lie?, September 6–October 20, 2007

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37. Arnaldo Roche Rabell

Puerto Rico b. 1955

High Tide signed and dated “Roche 2010” upper right oil on canvas 72 1/4 x 72 1/8 in. (183.5 x 183.2 cm) Painted in 2010. Estimate $50,000-70,000 Provenance Walter Otero Contemporary Art, San Juan Acquired from the above by the present owner

Afer studying in his native Puerto Rico and later in Chicago, Arnaldo Roche Rabell developed a unique style by applying of layers of bright colors, covered in black, which he would cut through with a pallet knife for a dramatic efect. Using a tactical approach, the artist ofen drapes canvas fabric over a model or a fgure and then imprints the contour of the fgure using frottage, resulting in highly complex images. Through his work, Roche Rabell explores dual issues that afect him personally, such as identity and belonging, as well as the more universal concept of victim versus victor. The present lot, High Tide (2010), is a complex and dynamic work that belongs to an important series of blue paintings by the artist. These pieces tend to desacralize myths and transform them into an everyday narrative. His intentional choice of a deep cobalt blue seeks to simplify his art and aesthetic, suggesting unity and equality, while detaching his work from an overly ornamental style. Blue also is symbolic of Roche Rabell’s Puerto Rican heritage, life on the island, and his conception of the sea as an overpowering, almost prison like place.

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38. Matta

Chile 1911-2002

Untitled oil on canvas 40 1/4 x 32 1/2 in. (102.2 x 82.6 cm) Painted in 1975, this work is accompanied with a certifcate of authenticity issued by Germana Matta. Estimate $60,000-80,000 Provenance Carone Gallery, Fort Lauderdale (acquired from the artist in 1980) Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited Fort Lauderdale, Nova Southeastern University Art Museum, Matta: Paintings from South Florida Collections, March 9-27, 1983 Boca Raton, Boca Raton Museum, Matta ReGeneration, January 1-March 9, 1997 Deland Museum of Art, Forging Identity: Contemporary Latin American Art, September 6, 2013–January 5, 2014 Literature Matta: Paintings from South Florida Collections, exh. cat., Ft. Lauderdale Museum of Art, Ft. Lauderdale, 1983, no. 21 (illustrated) Matta Re-Generation, exh. cat., Boca Museum, Florida, 1997, no. 23 (illustrated) Forging Identity: Contemporary Latin American Art, exh. cat. Deland Museum of Art, Deland, 2014 (illustrated on cover)

39. Milton da Costa

Brazil 1915-1988

Meninas con Borboletas signed and dated “Dacosta 56” upper right; further titled signed and dated “Menina con Borboletas - M. Dacosta Rio - 56” on the reverse oil on canvas 23 3/8 x 19 3/8 in. (59.4 x 49.2 cm) Painted in 1956. Estimate $70,000-90,000 Provenance Private Collection of Joaquim Eugenio de Lima, São Paulo (acquired from the artist in 1959) Acquired from the above by the present owner

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40. Sergio Hernández

Mexico b. 1957

San Miguel Arcángel signed, titled and dated “San Miguel Arcangel - 1995 Hernández” on the reverse oil and sand on canvas 54 3/4 x 98 1/4 in. (139.1 x 249.6 cm) Painted in 1995, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Galería de Arte Mexicano. Estimate $60,000-80,000 Provenance Galería de Arte Mexicano, Mexico City Acquired from the above by the present owner

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At the core of Sergio Hernández’s artistic practice is an exploration of his native Oaxaca. Born in 1957, Hernández studied at both the Escuela Nacional de Artes Plásticas and the Academia de San Carlos, producing a large body of work that ranges across diverse media. His oeuvre includes printmaking, sculpture, ceramics, painting and drawing. Considered a proponent of Mexican Vanguardism, Hernández draws inspiration from the natural light and earth tones of Oaxaca as well as the Pre-Colombian Mixteca culture. In San Miguel Arcángel, the artist references the Western art historical canon, all while incorporating Mexican imagery and motifs. Rendered in sof blue and green hues, the present lot is a dynamic large-scale composition that highlights the artist’s preoccupation with gestural fguration. In the foreground the viewer is confronted with a series of monumental fgures. It can be insinuated that the fgure of San Miguel is depicted riding atop the large horse, as he is traditionally rendered. Throughout the composition the artist has included several images of skeletons and roosters, both of which are typically associated with Mexican folklore and popular culture. San Migel Arcángel is a masterful example of Hernández’s interest in religious syncretism. By manipulating Catholic iconography and incorporating Mexican popular imagery, Hernández has created a very personal interpretation of the biblical story of San Miguel. In the present lot, Hernández references works by Modern Oaxacan artists, namely Rufno Tamayo and Francisco Toledo, both of whom championed indigenous Mexican imagery and themes. Hernández’s work has been exhibited widely, including a retrospective at the Museo de Arte Contemporaneo Internacional Rufno Tamayo in Mexico City in 2000.

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41. Guillermo Kuitca

Argentina b. 1961

Un taller para el joven Kuitca signed, titled and dated “UN TALLER PARA EL JOVEN KUITCA II - Kuitca - 1984” on the reverse oil on canvas 40 1/2 x 57 1/2 in. (102.9 x 146.1 cm) Painted in 1984. Estimate $60,000-80,000 Provenance Private Collection, Miami Christie’s, Paris, Art d’Amérique Latine, June 10, 2004 (lot 82) Acquired from the above sale by the present owner Exhibited Buenos Aires, Galería Julia Lublin, 1984 Belgium, Elisabeth Franck Gallery, Knokke-Le-Zoute, 1985

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The present lot, Un taller para el jóven Kuitca, (A Studio for Young Kuitca), belongs to a small group of early paintings that Kuitca made between his two most renowned series: Nadie olvida nada and El mar dulce. During this time he enrolled at the University of Buenos Aires and studied art history, eventually abandoning his studies to exhibit extensively. It was during this time that he became heavily involved with the theater, inspired by the work of the German choreographer Pina Bausch, who he visited in Wuppertal. Upon his return, he produced his frst theater piece in 1982. Consequently, his paintings from this period refect this theatrical infuence, where the compositional drama takes place in interior spaces that look like stages, much like the scene in the present work. This painting is flled with a number of symbols that will haunt Kuitca’s later works, including the baby carriage rolling down a series of steep steps, which references the iconic Odessa steps scene in the 1925 silent flm Battleship Potemkin. However, this painting also takes on a very personal subject, that of the artist in his studio surrounded by his tools and his work. Interestingly, most of Kuitca’s paintings are devoid of human forms, which he purposefully omits to allow the viewer to refect on the psychological space. This is a recurring technique used by Kuitca that is also used by directors to make the drama of a flm more intense. And even though there is no human fgure, it does not lack the human presence, which one can readily perceive through the haunting pair of eyes in the middle of the stage staring at us. The fact that all of the stretched paintings depicted in the work face away from the viewer combined with this looming human presence creates a sense of isolation and loneliness. The complex spaces and imagery Kuitca unveils in this painting reveal a very personal narrative, making this work unique and more poignant than his later works that deal with more universal themes.

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Property of the Brazil Golden Art Collection Lots 42–50

42. Marina Rheingantz

Brazil b. 1983

Pelada Caipira signed, titled and dated “Marina Rheingantz - Pelada Caipira - 2011” on the reverse oil on canvas 82 5/8 x 129 7/8 in. (209.9 x 329.9 cm) Painted in 2011, this work is accompanied with a certifcate of authenticity issued by Galeria Fortes Vilaça. Estimate $20,000-30,000 Provenance Galeria Fortes Vilaça, São Paulo

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43. Erika Verzutti

Brazil b. 1971

Mira acrylic and glitter on concrete 8 5/8 x 5 1/4 x 1 3/4 in. (21.9 x 13.3 x 4.4 cm) Executed in 2013, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Galeria Fortes Vilaรงa. Estimate $18,000-22,000 Provenance Galeria Fortes Vilaรงa, Sรฃo Paulo

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44. Mira Schendel

Switzerland / Brazil 1919-1988

Untitled signed and dated “Mira Schendel, 64” lower right ink and graphite on rice paper 18 1/2 x 8 3/4 in. (47 x 22.2 cm) Executed in 1964, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Fólio Livraria. Estimate $15,000-20,000 Provenance Fólio Livraria, São Paulo

45. Amilcar de Castro

Brazil 1920-2002

Untitled (from the series ‘Cut Sculpture’) signed and dated “Amilcar de Castro 98” on the reverse; further signed “Amilcar de Castro” on the reverse SAC50 steel, in 3 parts 11 7/8 x 23 7/8 x 12 in. (30.2 x 60.6 x 30.5 cm) Executed circa 1990, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity from the Authentication Committee from the Estate of Amilcar de Castro. Estimate $60,000-80,000 Provenance Paulo Darzé Galeria de Arte Ltda., Salvador

Property of the Brazil Golden Art Collection

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46. Antonio Dias

Brazil b. 1944

Untitled signed and dated “Antonio Dias 2005” on the reverse of the horizontal canvas oil and copper leaf on canvas 58 3/4 x 82 5/8 x 6 3/8 in. (149.2 x 209.9 x 16.2 cm) Executed in 2005, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Galeria Luisa Strina. Estimate $120,000-180,000 Provenance Galeria Luisa Strina, São Paulo

Antonio Dias frst came to prominence in the 1960s with his drawings and assemblages that ironically and playfully critiqued the Brazilian military dictatorship. Dias’ artwork defes categorization as it ranges across mediums, drawing infuence from a variety of artistic movements ranging from Pop Art to Minimalism. In 1966, the artist fed the military regime in Brazil and settled in Milan where he focused mainly on producing two-dimensional works that championed rigorous geometric forms, ofen including text and words. The present lot illustrates a departure from the artist’s earlier style and illustrates his current preoccupation with Minimalism. Untitled (2005), while undeniably a painting is also a sculptural piece comprised of three rectangular canvases. The color palette of red and gold is one that Dias has ofen utilized in his work and visually it complements the copper tone of the canvas that conjoins the two components, creating a tromp l’oeil efect. In this work, Dias has challenged the conventional notion of a two-dimensional picture plane through his use of volume and irregular outlines. Through his destruction of the traditional pictorial space, Dias frustrates the viewer’s perception, forcing him or her to dissect each element of the artwork and re-evaluate the traditional idea of a painting.

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Property of the Brazil Golden Art Collection

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47. Tunga

Brazil 1952-2016

Untitled glass, steel magnets, nail and rubber 27 3/8 x 31 1/8 x 10 1/2 in. (69.5 x 79.1 x 26.7 cm) Executed in 2008, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Paulo Darzé Galeria de Arte Ltda. Estimate $60,000-80,000 Provenance Paulo Darzé Galeria de Arte Ltda., Salvador

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48. Ernesto Neto

Brazil b. 1964

Bo Gen Landy Scap Egg, Dayli polyamid tul and stocking, styrofoam balls and glass beads 63 x 63 x 63 in. (160 x 160 x 160 cm) Executed in 2009, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Galería Elba Benítez and signed by the artist. Estimate $60,000-80,000 Provenance Galería Elba Benítez, Madrid

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Property of the Brazil Golden Art Collection

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49. José Damasceno

Brazil b. 1968

Natureza Morta Exercicio marble and painted wood, in 2 parts i) 29 1/4 x 63 1/8 x 39 3/8 in. (74.3 x 160.3 x 100 cm) ii) 8 1/4 x 17 7/8 x 6 3/4 in. (21 x 45.4 x 17.1 cm) Executed in 2011, this work is accompanied with a certifcate of authenticity issued by Galeria Fortes Vilaça. Estimate $20,000-30,000 Provenance Galeria Fortes Vilaça, São Paulo

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50. Henrique Oliveira

Brazil b.1973

Dois Fumos signed and dated “Henrique Oliveira 2011/2012” on the reverse acrylic on canvas 55 1/4 x63 1/8 in. (140.3 x 160.3 cm) Painted in 2011-2012, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Galeria Millan. Estimate $20,000-30,000 Provenance Galeria Millan, São Paulo

Property of the Brazil Golden Art Collection

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Color. Light. Energy.

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51. León Ferrari

Argentina 1920-2013

Untitled signed and dated “LEON FERRARI 1978” on a metal plaque on the lower edge stainless steel 15 5/8 x 7 1/2 x 7 3/8 in. (39.7 x 19.1 x 18.7 cm) Executed in 1978. Estimate $40,000-60,000 Provenance Collection of Shigeharu Hayashi, São Paulo By descent to Amélia Yumico Hayashi Dias, São Paulo Acquired from the above by the present owner

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52. Carlos Cruz-Diez

Venezuela b. 1923

Physichromie No. 606 signed, titled and dated “Physichromie No. 606 - Cruz-Diez - Paris, Juin 1972” acrylic and plastic mounted on wood with aluminum frame 27 7/8 x 28 1/4 in. (70.8 x 71.8 cm) Executed in 1972. Estimate $180,000-250,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner We are grateful to the Cruz-Diez Art Foundation for their kind assistance in cataloguing this work.

“Color is an autonomous event that does not require form.” Carlos Cruz-Diez

Alternative angle of the present lot

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53. Jesús Rafael Soto

Venezuela 1923-2005

Cuadrado virtual azul, con gris signed, titled and dated “CUADRADO VIRTUAL AZUL, CON GRIS - SOTO - 1977” on the reverse painted wood, metal rod with nylon strings 32 1/4 x 32 1/4 in. (81.9 x 81.9 cm) Executed in 1977. Estimate $300,000-400,000 Provenance Collection of Arturo Buenaño, Caracas Collection of Gustavo Lagrave, Caracas Gómez Fine Art - Galería, San Juan Acquired from the above by the present owner

“We must interpret the values that, thanks to science, completely change our idea of the universe, and we must propose them in our turn through art.” Jesús Rafael Soto

Alternative angle of the present lot

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Alexander Calder, Untitled, 1941. Sheet metal, wire and paint, 45 x 117 in. (114.3 x 297.2 cm), Private Collection © 2016 Calder Foundation, New York / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

“One concern that has haunted me throughout my artistic exploration,” Soto once observed, “is how to bring matter back to its essential value, i.e. energy; or in more concrete terms, how to transform material elements in my work into a chance state or vibration.” This pursuit of the immaterial (“the tangible reality of the universe”) shaped Soto’s practice through the critical postwar decades as he followed the progression of color from painting to optical vibration and fnally into suprasensorial environments. He arrived in Paris in 1950 and drew within the Constructivist milieu of the Salon des Réalités Nouvelles and the Galerie Denise René, which included him in Le Mouvement (1955), the seminal period exhibition of optical and kinetic art. Motivated at frst by the examples of Alexander Calder and Piet Mondrian, Soto sought to create “a truly abstract art,” beginning with the early series Repetitions and Progressions. “At a given point,” he refected, “I understood that I had to eliminate one of two liberties, and through this discovery, in 1957, I retained, almost mechanically, the tightly ruled background screen, leaving the superimposed element free.” Within this given framework of suspended metal wires and rods, Soto analyzed vibration in myriad variations and formats, shaping the immateriality of color in space and time.

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“Soto’s optical paintings keep the question of what is real and what is imaginary in perpetual suspension,” critic Guy Brett observed. “When he hangs a metal rod in front of a lined screen (his ‘sign’ reduced to its simplest terms) the optical interference of these two elements releases a third—the vibration—which is real to the eyes though it has no material existence. The rod is not exactly dissolved into vibrations, for then it would be absorbed into another medium and disappear altogether. The vibrations take the shape of the solid rod, tracing its movement in pulses, as if they were its shadow. But the situation is so fnely balanced it could equally be that the solid rod is the ‘shadow’ of the energy pulses, which ‘really’ constitute the rod and everything else we see as solid stable objects in the world.” From a single bar at the top of Cuadrado virtual azul, con gris, a stream of thin metal rods hangs from transparent nylon threads before a dark gray square, fickering in shifing patterns of light and shadow against the lined ground. As in Tríptico a cuadrados virtuales (1974), a “virtual” square emerges amid the shimmering optical surface, produced here by the vibrations of rods painted blue at their center. The slightest movement of the steel

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Yves Klein, Relief planétaire sans titre, 1961. Pure blue pigment and synthetic bronze resin, 33 7/8 x 25 3/4 x 2 in. (86 x 65.4 x 5 cm) © Yves Klein / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris 2016

Piet Mondrian, Broadway Boogie Woogie, 1941-43. Oil on canvas, 50 x 50 in. (127 x 127 cm), Museum of Modern Art, New York 2016 © ES Mondrian/Holtzman Trust

rods induces a wavy moiré efect, dematerializing the blue square in the dynamic temporal space activated between the static support and the viewer. “Soto’s achievement has been to give a luminous imaginative force to the idea of continuum,” Brett remarked. “Forms are not localizable, it’s not possible to say: there are the forms and this is the space that contains them. Forms and space are continually creating each other, changing into each other.” This fux of fugitive lines and color is perceptual and interactive, the optical vibrations conditioned by the surrounding space and the ambulant viewer. “It has always been part of the poetry of Soto’s work to be half in the world and half out of it,” Brett concluded. “The rods oscillate between the abstract world of relations and the world of things. Unpredictable currents from the world of things activate and bring to life the painting’s space.” Abigail McEwan, PhD

1. Jesús Rafael Soto, “Artist’s Notes,” in Soto: Paris and Beyond, 1950-1970, ed. Estrellita Brodsky (New York: Grey Art Gallery, 2012), 57. 2 Soto, quoted in Claude-Louis Renard, “Excerpts from an Interview with Soto,” Soto: A Retrospective Exhibition (New York: The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1974), 15-16. 3 Jesús Rafael Soto, “Artist’s Notes,” in Soto: Paris and Beyond, 1950-1970, ed. Estrellita Brodsky (New York: Grey Art Gallery, 2012), 57. 4 Guy Brett, “Introduction,” Soto, October-November 1969 (New York: Marlborough-Gerson Gallery, 1969), 14. 5 Ibid., 15-16.

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54. Carlos Rojas

Colombia 1933-1997

Untitled (from the series ‘Signos y señales’) signed and dated “Carlos Rojas - 1970” on the reverse acrylic on canvas 27 7/8 x 27 7/8 in. (70.8 x 70.8 cm) Painted in 1970.

Estimate $12,000-18,000 Provenance Galería Durban, Caracas Acquired from the above in 1991

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55. Carlos Rojas

Colombia 1933-1997

Untitled (from the series ‘Ventanas’) painted iron 78 3/4 x 53 1/4 x 15 3/8 in. (200 x 135.3 x 39.1 cm) Executed in 1971.

Estimate $25,000-35,000 Provenance Sotheby’s, New York, Latin American Art, June 4, 1999, lot 196 Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited Bogota, Galería El Museo, Homenaje a Carlos Rojas, 1997 Bogota, Galería El Museo, Abstracción Local. Refexión con Carlos Rojas, July 1997

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56. Guillermo Kuitca

Argentina b. 1961

No. 17 initialed “K” lower right oil on canvas 12 x 9 1/2 in. (30.5 x 24.1 cm) Painted in 1988. Estimate $10,000-15,000 Provenance Private Collection, Ottawa Christie’s, New York, Christie’s East: Latin American Art, November 23, 1999, lot 95 Acquired from the above by the present owner

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57. Federico Herrero

Costa Rica b. 1978

Landscape initialed, titled and dated “H - 2004 - Landscape” on the reverse oil, acrylic, spray paint and permanent marker on canvas 94 3/4 x 43 3/4 in. (240.7 x 111.1 cm) Executed in 2004. Estimate $25,000-35,000 Provenance Gallery Koyanagi, Tokyo Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2004

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58. Federico Herrero

Costa Rica b. 1978

Untitled acrylic and ink on canvas 32 x 47 in. (81.3 x 119.4 cm) Painted in 2006, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity signed by the artist. Estimate $10,000-15,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

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59. Jorge Piqueras

Peru b. 1925

Mimetismo oil on masonite 24 7/8 x 39 1/8 in. (63.2 x 99.4 cm) Painted in 1958. Estimate $8,000-12,000 Provenance Lorenzelli Gallery, Bergamo Private Collection, Pavia Capitolium Art Brokerage, Modern and Contemporary Art Online, July 7, 2015, lot 0481 Private Collection, Europe Acquired from the above by the present owner

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60. Alfredo Jaar

Chile b. 1956

Refugee (Water) Lightbox with color transparency and two mirrors, in 3 parts Lightbox: 40 1/2 x 40 1/2 x 5 3/8 in. (102.9 x 102.9 x 13.7 cm) each mirror: 20 x 10 x 2 in. (50.8 x 25.4 x 5.1 cm) overall dimensions: 46 x 40 x 28 in. (117 cm x 102 cm x 71 cm) Executed in 1988, this work is unique. Estimate $60,000-80,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

Refugee (Water), 1988 is an important piece within the oeuvre of Chilean born artist, Alfredo Jaar. Jaar’s art ofen centers on controversial issues such as victims of political violence, immigration and refugee camps, as in the present lot. These issues question the relationship between First and Third World countries and their interplay within the global economy. It is interesting and perhaps ftting that Jaar utilizes photographic imagery to illustrate such poignant yet politically charged subject matters. However, through his use of this medium Jaar points to the inefcacy of “generic” photographs in our society today, as they no longer elicit an emotional response from the general public, who have become desensitized by an oversaturation of explicit images of brutality. While the purpose of these types of images in the news or other forms of media is to give us the illusion of being present, the moment we look away we are lef with a void and sense of absence. Instead, Jaar proposes to reverse the methodology by refraining from showing explicit atrocities and “ofers an absence that could perhaps provoke a presence” (Alfredo Jaar, Let there be light: The Rwanda Project 1994-1998, Barcelona: Centre d’Art Santa Mónica, 1998, 21). Thus in the case of the present lot, Jaar elucidates the quandary of refugees who constantly face two harrowing choices: either to return to their place of origin and face persecution or to live in a camp with a dubious and uncertain promise of freedom. He attempts to represent this abysmal sense of uncertainty by projecting the face of a refugee— gazing at us in recognition—through refection in a split mirror. In doing this, Jaar invites viewers to look at the work from diferent angles—yet never directly gazing into the light box itself—eliciting the desire to lock eyes with the subject while simultaneously making it almost impossible. The various angles provide us with a myriad of unsettling images that represent the disconcerting conditions of exile. Therefore, Refugee (Water) evokes a response that may ofer new insights and allow us to form a more critical image of reality.

Details of the present lot

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Vivarte: Contemporary Colombian Women Artists Lots 61–69

Vivarte’s third edition features works by some of the most critically-recognized Colombian female artists. Curated by Monica Espinel, it presents diferent generations employing multiple artistic approaches to articulate the female experience while exploring issues of race, gender, violence, history, and colonialism. The remarkable variety in thought, approach, and intent is evident in the range of multimedia works that include Olga de Amaral’s formally groundbreaking weavings inspired by pre-Columbian textiles and gold artifacts; Alicia Barney’s pioneering ecofeminist works which have incorporated found and recycled materials since the seventies; Karen Paulina Biswell’s incisive portraits of indigenous women of the Embera Chamis community; Monika Bravo’s dynamic cityscapes created from a postmodern amalgam of infuences ranging from Google images to Italo Calvino and architecture; Clemencia Echeverri’s meticulous drawings that visually render the inaudible sounds produced by bats as a way to expand the limits of perception, experience and memory; María Elvira Escallón’s photographs depicting the convergence of the Baroque and contemporary in evocative landscape interventions; Ana Mercedes Hoyos’ vivid paintings of Colombia’s Afro-descendant communities; Luz Angela Lizarazo’s delicate sculptures, where minimalism, feminism, and the tactile processes of cooking, cleaning, preserving, and weaving of wishbones collide; and lastly, Freda Sargent’s commanding self-portrait aptly titled “Woman under the Shadow” whose painterly language and unorthodox use of color and perspective show her fading of into a remote, internalized zone. VivArte is a joint philanthropic efort by its participating organizations, Caring for Colombia and Primero Lo Primero, to transform vulnerable communities in Colombia through health, education, and arts initiatives, and to provide a platform for international visibility for Colombian contemporary artists. The proceeds from the sales of these works will beneft the artists and VivArte’s organizations.

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61. Olga de Amaral

Colombia b. 1932

Poblado K signed, titled and dated “Poblado K - Olga de Amaral 2016” on a label afxed on the reverse gesso, acrylic and gold leaf on linen 78 3/4 x 39 3/8 in. (200 x 100 cm) Executed in 2016. Estimate $200,000-300,000 Provenance Casa Amaral, Bogota

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Olga de Amaral, Umbra 30, 2003. Linen, silver leaf, gesso, acrylic paint, 32 x 78 ½ in. (81.3 x 199.4 cm), Metropolitan Museum of Art © Olga de Amaral

Olga de Amaral’s complex tapestries oscillate between traditional and avant-garde artistic practices. The present lot, Poblado K, is a prime example of the artist’s mature style in which she blurs the lines between art and craf, presenting the viewer with a compelling artwork that is at once textile and sculpture. Born in Bogota, Olga de Amaral began her formal training as an architect, a practice that would later pervade her compositions. Dissatisfed with her schooling, de Amaral traveled to the United States and enrolled at the Cranbrook Academy of Fine Art to study textiles. During her time there, de Amaral was drawn to weaving and tirelessly worked to perfect her technique. Upon her return to Colombia in 1955, she was exposed to a wide array of traditional and new materials that allowed her to situate her approach within the context of contemporary art. Experimenting with ancient weaving, de Amaral drew great inspiration from the peasant women of her native Colombia who spun wool on the streets and during this period she utilized a variety of colored threads in her textiles. De Amaral’s formal training and initial experimentation in Colombia complemented her extensive travels and undoubtedly infuenced her style. Her travels to Peru were particularly signifcant as she was exposed to Andean weaving. During this time, de Amaral began utilizing strips of textured linens that she would braid

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and coat with gold and silver leaf. The results were impressive compositions featuring compact geometric patterns. Similar to many artists from the modern milieu, de Amaral was preoccupied with capturing light and creating depth in her work. This was achieved through the efects of layering and superimposing. The addition of gold and silver leaf would foreshadow de Amaral’s later experimentation with the application of paint and gesso to her textiles, solidifying her interest in bridging the gap between art and craf. As de Amaral’s oeuvre continued to develop in complexity and scale, her practice also began to shif. She began developing pre-woven fber cords that were wrapped and bound in a cylindrical fashion. By using pre-woven strips, de Amaral was able to streamline her manual process and ensure the production of a consistent geometric pattern. This led to the artist’s completion of large-scale tapestry installations in the early 1970s such as El Gran Muro (1973) that was installed at Atlanta’s Peach Tree Plaza Hotel. The present lot illustrates de Amaral’s mastery of her mature craf. A large-scale gold piece, Poblado K is composed of two distinct weaving patterns that each occupy half of the compositional space. The top section of this work is composed of a tight geometric pattern that is achieved by the repetition of small squares. The bottom half of the textile is comprised of a gestural pattern,

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Rudolf Stingel, Untitled, 2006. Oil and enamel on canvas, 39 ¼ x 32 ½ in. (99.7 x 82.6 cm) © 2016 Rudolf Stingel

Gustave Klimt, Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer I, 1907. Oil and gold on canvas, 54 x 54 in. (137.2 x 127.2 cm), Neue Galerie

encompassing circular elements and darker gold patches. The inclusion of two distinct designs builds a dynamic composition that creates the illusion of movement. The melding of these vastly diferent weaving techniques and styles along with the inclusion of gesso, acrylic and gold leaf highlights de Amaral’s preoccupation with various artistic principles: geometric rigor, abstraction, textural depth, and movement. In Poblado K, the viewer is confronted with a work that is neither painting, sculpture, nor textile but rather an amalgamation of all three. Relating to many other contemporary artist’s installation pieces, Poblado K forces the viewer to contemplate the space he or she occupies in relation to the piece and provides a new understanding of depth and spatial perspective. In this work, de Amaral has remained true to her foundations in textile, while elevating the craf to a form of contemporary art. Olga de Amaral’s artwork is held in many prestigious museum collections, most notably the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art, New York. In August 2017, the Nevada Art Museum will inaugurate a major exhibition of her work entitled Unsettled.

Sold to Beneft VivArte

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62. Freda Sargent

Great Britain /

Colombia b. 1928 Mujer bajo la sombra signed “Freda Sargent” on the reverse oil on canvas 39 1/8 x 39 1/4 in. (99.4 x 99.7 cm) Painted circa 1990. Estimate $5,000-7,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist

63. María Elvira Escallón

Great Britain /

Colombia b. 1954 Untitled (from the series ‘Nuevas Floras’) chromogenic print 27 1/4 x 40 1/2 in. (69.2 x 102.9 cm) Executed in 2002-2011, this work is number 3 from an edition of 5. Estimate $6,000-8,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist

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64. Monika Bravo

Colombia b. 1964

Studies for Landscape of Belief_Blueprint, NYC-BOG-CHI blue print, archival pigment on cotton rag in wooden box, triptych each: 43 5/8 x 23 5/8 in. (110.8 x 60 cm) Executed in 2013, this work is number 3 from an edition of 3. Estimate $10,000-15,000 Provenance Johannes Vogt Gallery, New York

Sold to Beneft VivArte

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65. Karen Paulina Biswell

Colombia b. 1983

66. Ana Mercedes Hoyos

Imamá (from the series ‘Nama Bu’) each: signed, dated and numbered “Biswell - 2016 - 1/3” on the reverse analogue prints, in 15 parts each: 11 1/2 x 11 1/2 in. (29.2 x 29.2 cm) Executed in 2013-2015, this work is number 1 from an edition of 3.

La Procesión acrylic on linen 59 1/8 x 90 1/2 in. (150.2 x 229.9 cm) Painted in 2014.

Estimate $5,000-7,000

Provenance Estate of the artist

Colombia 1942-2014

Estimate $40,000-60,000

Provenance Acquired directly from the artist Exhibited Bogoya, Valenzuela Klenner Gallery, Nama Bu, November 19, 2015-February 13, 2016

Sold to Beneft VivArte

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67. Luz Ángela Lizarazo

Colombia b. 1964

Y woven wishbones 53 1/2 x 63 5/8 in. (135.9 x 161.6 cm) Executed in 2014. Estimate $7,000-9,000 Provenance Galería Eduardo Fernandes, Sãu Paulo

68. Alicia Barney

Colombia b. 1952

Diario objeto (Serié II) found objects, pigments and acrylic 17 1/2 x 17 1/2 in. (44.5 x 44.5 cm) Executed in 1978-1979. Estimate $10,000-15,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist

69. Clemencia Echeverri

Colombia b. 1950

Noctulo House Eco signed and dated “Clemencia Echeverri 2015” lower right collage and ink drawing on print 65 7/8 x 40 1/4 in. (167.3 x 102.2 cm) Executed in 2015. Estimate $12,000-18,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist

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Sold to Beneft VivArte

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70. Edgar Negret

Colombia 1920-2012

Sol encajado signed, titled and dated “Sol - Negret - 1991� on the base painted aluminum 35 3/8 x 31 1/4 x 21 3/4 in. (89.9 x 79.4 x 55.2 cm) Executed in 1991, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity from the Estate of Edgar Negret. Estimate $25,000-35,000 Provenance Estate of the artist Private Collection, Bogota Acquired from the above by the present owner

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71. Omar Rayo

Colombia 1928-2010

Washington Square signed, titled and dated “Omar Rayo - 62 - Washington Square” on the reverse acrylic on canvas 34 x 36 in. (86.4 x 91.4 cm) Painted in 1962. Estimate $25,000-35,000 Provenance Collection of Julien J. Studley, New York Thence by descent to the present owner

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72. Julio le Parc

Argentina b. 1928

Modulation 229 (Thème 67 a variation) signed, titled and dated “MODULATION 229 theme 67 a variation - 1979 - Le Parc” on the reverse oil on canvas 50 5/8 x 50 5/8 in. (128.6 x 128.6 cm) Painted in 1979. Estimate $20,000-30,000 Provenance Galería Durbán, Caracas Private Collection Caracas Private Collection, Miami Christie’s, New York, Latin American Sale Day Session, November 20, 2007, lot 155 Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited Caracas, Galería Durbán, Le Parc, 1979

73. Antonio Berni

Argentina 1905-1981

The Bishop Signed, dated and numbered “10/11 Antonio Berni 63” on the lower edge xylograph-collage-relief on paper 36 x 22 1/2 in. (91.4 x 57.2 cm) Executed in 1963, this work is number 10 from an edition of 11. Estimate $5,000-7,000

Provenance Private Collection, California

74. Antonio Asis

Argentina b. 1932

Vibración color signed, titled and dated “vibracion color - Asis - 1965” on the reverse acrylic on panel 62 x 30 1/8 in. (157.5 x 76.5 cm) Executed in 1965. Estimate $20,000-30,000 Provenance Pierre Berge & Associés, Paris, Art moderne et contemporain, December 17, 2008, lot 158 Acquired from the above by the present owner

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75. Judith Lauand

Brazil b. 1922

Untitled signed “Judith Lauand - 1977” lower right; further signed and dated “Judith Lauand - 1977” on the reverse oil on canvas 23 3/8 x 23 3/4 in. (59.4 x 60.3 cm) Painted in 1977. Estimate $25,000-35,000 Provenance Private Collection, São Paulo

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76. Luiz Zerbini

Brazil b. 1959

Untitled watercolor on cut and woven paper 11 1/8 x 15 1/4 in. (28.3 x 38.7 cm) Painted in 1993. Estimate $8,000-12,000 Provenance Galería Camargo Vilaça, São Paulo Acquired from the above by the present owner

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77. Rogelio Polesello

Argentina 1939-2012

Untitled signed and dated “Polesello 1967” incised lower lef Plexiglass with wooden framing elements 72 x 39 1/2 in. (182.9 x 100.3 cm) Executed in 1967. Estimate $30,000-50,000 Provenance Private Collection, Buenos Aires Sotheby’s, New York, Latin American Art, November 19, 2008, lot 158 Private Collection (acquired from the above sale) Phillips de Pury & Company, New York, Latin America, September 28, 2010, lot 172 Acquired from the above sale by the present owner

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78. Carmelo Arden-Quin

Uruguay 1913-2010

Forme Blanche Relief signed, titled and dated “Forme Blanche Relief - Arden Quin - 1949” on the reverse wood relief with polished lacquer 19 7/8 x 16 x 5/8 in. (50.5 x 40.6 x 1.6 cm) Executed in 1949. Estimate $50,000-70,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist Literature Alexadre de la Salle, ed., Carmelo Arden Quin - Catalogue Raisonné, Nice, 2008, no. 248, p. 219 (illustrated)

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79. Eugenio Espinoza

Venezuela b. 1950

H estilo impenetrable pequeño signed and dated “E Espinoza - 05” on the reverse oil on canvas 20 1/8 x 20 in. (51.1 x 50.8 cm) Painted in 2005. Estimate $7,000-10,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

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80. Victor Grippo

Argentina 1936-2002

A 17 grados de la vertical signed, titled and dated “A 17° de la vertical - Grippo/2000” on the reverse painted plaster, glass, plumb line, coal and wood 18 1/2 x 9 x 4 1/2 in. (47 x 22.9 x 11.4 cm) Executed in 2000. Estimate $40,000-60,000 Provenance Ruth Benzacar Galería de Arte, Buenos Aires Alexander and Bonin, New York Acquired from the above by the present owner

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81. Bosco Sodi

Mexico b. 1970

Untitled signed and dated “BOSCO - NY 2012” on the reverse mixed media on canvas diameter: 73 in. (185.4 cm) Executed in 2012. Estimate $30,000-50,000 Provenance Pace Gallery, New York Acquired from the above by the present owner

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Sold to Beneft Y.ES

82. Simón Vega

El Salvador b. 1972

Tropical Mercury Capsule Diagram (from the series ‘Tropical Space Projects’) acrylic and acrylic marker on canvas 31 x 49 5/8 in. (78.7 x 126 cm) Executed in 2010. Estimate $6,000-8,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist

Born in San Salvador in 1972, Simón Vega received his BFA from the University of Veracruz in Mexico and his Masters from the Compeutense University in Madrid. Growing up in El Salvador in the 1970s and 1980s, Vega witnessed a period when the United States and USSR competed for infuence in Central America, memories which have remained infuential in his oeuvre. Through his work, he explores political and sociocultural themes and is directly inspired by the informal architecture and objects found both in his native El Salvador and elsewhere in Central America. Vega is known for his sculptures and installations made from various found objects, such as shipping crates, signs, and old televisions. His works are meant to mimic and resemble modernist buildings, as well as create sculptural surveillance systems, tech robots and satellites characteristic of the Cold War period.

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Y.ES is an initiative of the Robert S Wennett and Mario Cader-Frech Foundation. The Y.ES program’s mission is to create opportunities for outstanding Salvadoran contemporary artists to advance their artistic practice and engage with artists, curators, collectors, gallerists and the media within and outside El Salvador. Programming includes professional development, studio visits, exhibition and public programming, publications and residencies, and more. Proceeds from the sale of this work will be allocated to the Y.ES Grants for artists.

This work, created with acrylic and acrylic marker on canvas, is part of the Tropical Space Proyectos series that deals with the efects of the Cold War in Central America. These drawings mimic NASA blueprint diagrams used in the development of space capsules during the “Space Race” of the 1950s and 60s, and are parodies that use elements of these technical drawings and texts in a humorous way. The drawings are created to document the ephemeral sculptures that are built by the artist in wood, metal and found materials as a mockery of the high tech originals. The present lot, Tropical Mercury Capsule Diagram, depicts the sculptural piece that was presented at the Pérez Art Museum of Miami’s exhibition Global Positioning Systems and which is part of the PAMM’s permanent collection. Today, Vega continues to live and work in El Salvador and has exhibited throughout Europe, Latin America and the United States.

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83. José Bedia

Cuba b. 1959

Más de lo mismo y uno de necio signed and dated “J Bedia 00” lower right; further titled “más de lo mismo y uno de necio” on lower edge ink, conte crayon, white chalk and pastel on amate paper 47 1/8 x 94 1/4 in. (119.7 x 239.4 cm) Executed in 2000. Estimate $10,000-15,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

84. Juan Roberto Diago

Cuba b. 1971

Untitled signed and dated “JRDiago - 2005” on the reverse; further signed twice “JRDiago” on the reverse oil, watercolor and charcoal on canvas 39 3/8 x 51 1/8 in. (100 x 129.9 cm) Painted in 2004. Estimate $10,000-15,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

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85. Julio Galán

Mexico 1958-2006

Untitled signed and dated “Julio Galán 1999” lower right collage and oil on canvas 51 x 73 1/4 in. (129.5 x 186.1 cm) Painted in 1999. Estimate $40,000-60,000 Provenance Ramis Barquet Gallery, New York (acquired from the artist) Acquired from the above by the present owner

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86. Omar Rayo

Colombia 1928-2010

Anatomy of Fall signed, titled and dated “Omar Rayo - 64 - Anatomy of Fall” on the reverse acrylic on canvas 30 x 28 in. (76.2 x 71.1 cm) Painted in 1964. Estimate $25,000-35,000 Provenance Collection of Julien J. Studley, New York Thence by descent to the present owner

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87. Marco Magi

Uruguay b. 1957

Complete Coverage on Lewitt cut paper, tryptich each 23 5/8 x 17 5/8 in. (60 x 44.8 cm) Executed in 2005. Estimate $12,000-18,000 Provenance Josée Bienvenu, New York Acquired from the above by the present owner

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88. León Ferrari

Argentina 1920-2013

Carta a Torres-García signed, titled and dated “Carta a Torres García León Ferrari 5/10/05” lower right mixed media on paper 24 1/4 x 17 1/4 in. (61.6 x 43.8 cm) Executed in 2005. Estimate $20,000-30,000 Provenance Pan American Art Projects, Miami Acquired from the above by the present owner

89. León Ferrari

Argentina 1920-2013

Sombra box with painted glass and lacquer 19 x 15 x 2 in. (48.3 x 38.1 x 5.1 cm) Executed in 2004, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by the artist. Estimate $20,000-30,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

Literature Bethsheba Spain and Timothy Stroud, ed., Géométrie hors limites art contemporain latino-américain dans la collection Jean et Colette Cherqui (Geometry Beyond Limits LatinAmerican Contemporary Art from the Jean and Colette Cherque Collection, Milan, 2010, p. 217 (illustrated)

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90. José Bedia

Cuba b. 1959

Otra estación signed and dated “Bedia 97” lower lef; further titled “OTRA ESTACIÓN” lower right oil and black ink on canvas 68 x 104 1/4 in. (172.7 x 264.8 cm) Painted in 1997. Estimate $20,000-30,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner in 2004

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91.

Tania Bruguera

Cuba b. 1968

El Peso de la culpa signed, titled and numbered “Tania Bruguera - El Peso de la Culpa - 5/10” lower right archival ink jet print 31 7/8 x 10 3/8 in. (81 x 26.4 cm) Conceived in 1997 and printed circa 2001, this work is number 5 from an edition of 10. Estimate $12,000-18,000 Provenance Iturralde Gallery, Los Angeles Acquired from the above by the present owner in 2002 Exhibited Caracas, Museo de Bellas Artes, Desde el cuerpo: Alegorías de lo femenino, February 15, 1998

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92. Abel Barroso

Cuba b. 1971

93. Tania Bruguera

Cuba b. 1968

ATM (Cajero automรกtico) xylography on carved wood 28 3/8 x 33 3/8 x 11 in. (72.1 x 84.8 x 27.9 cm) Executed in 2011.

Sunfowers III ink and collage on paper 93 3/4 x 48 3/4 in. (238.1 x 123.8 cm) Executed in 2002.

Estimate $5,000-7,000

Estimate $15,000-20,000

Provenance Pan American Art Projects, Miami (acquired from the artist) Acquired from the above by the present owner

Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner Exhibited San Francisco Art Institute, Tania Bruguera-Ghada Amer., February 13 - May 11, 2002

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(i)

(ii)

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94. Carlos Garaicoa

Cuba b. 1967

Two Works: i) Y nos obliga a volar en la misma direccion ii) Ese Silencio Ambiguo i) signed, titled and dated “Y nos obligan a volar en una misma dirección aunque no lo hagamos - C. Garaicoa Proyectista - Apuntado en La Habana, Cuba 1999 - C Garaicoa” lef edge ii) signed, titled and dated “Ese Silencio ambiguo - C. Garaicoa - Apuntado en Saratoga Springs, NY, 1998 - C Garaicoa” lower right i) graphite, ink jet print, dead bugs, plastic strips and tape on paper ii) graphite and ink jet print on paper i) 26 1/2 x 34 1/2 in. (67.3 x 87.6 cm) ii) 26 1/8 x 34 1/2 in. (66.4 x 87.6 cm) i) Executed in 1999. ii) Executed in 1998.

95. Marcius Galán

Colombia b. 1975

Ponto Comum signed and dated “M Galan - 2010” on the reverse of one of the elements painted concrete, in two parts each: 14 1/4 x 12 x 4 in. (36.2 x 30.5 x 10.2 cm) Executed in 2010. Estimate $10,000-15,000 Provenance Galeria Silvia Cintra + Box 4, Rio de Janeiro Acquired from the above by the present owner

Estimate $12,000-18,000 Provenance Galería Jacobo Karpio, Costa Rica Acquired from the above by the present owner

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96. Anna Maria Maiolino

Brazil b. 1942

Untitled (from the series ‘Outras Marcas’) i) signed and dated “1999 - Anna Maria Maiolino” lower edge; further initialed, signed, titled and dated “AMM: Anna Maria Maiolino - 1999 - s/titulo da série Outras Marcas” on the reverse ii) signed and dated “Anna Maria Maiolino” lower edge; further initialed, signed, titled and dated “AMM: Anna Maria Maiolino - 1999 - s/titulo da série Outras Marcas” on the reverse iii) signed, titled and dated “Outras Marcas” - Anna Maria Maiolino - 1999” lower edge; further initialed, signed, titled and dated “AMM: Anna Maria Maiolino - 1999 - s/titulo da série Outras Marcas” on the reverse ink on paper, in 3 parts each: 27 3/8 x 11 1/2 in. (69.5 x 29.2 cm) Executed in 1999. Estimate $30,000-50,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

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97. Darío Escobar

Guatemala b. 1971

Untitled iron, steel, wood, plastic, tin and silver 75 x 23 3/8 x 15 7/8 in. (190.5 x 59.4 x 40.3 cm) Executed in 1999, this work is registered in the artist’s archives under reference number DESC02_285. Estimate $15,000-20,000 Provenance Galería Jacobo Karpio, Costa Rica Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited Los Angeles, The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), Poetics of the Handmade, 2007 Literature Poetics of the Handmade Catalogue, exh. cat., The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), Los Angeles, 2007, p. 86 (illustrated) José Luis Falconi, ed., A Singular Plurality: The Works of Dario Escobar, Cambridge, pp. 140-141 (illustrated)

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98. Santiago Sierra

Spain / Mexico b. 1966

Two works: i) 160 cm Line Tattooed on 4 People El Gallo Arte Contemporaneo. Salamanca, Spain. December 2000 (Línea de 160 cm tatuada sobre 4 personas El Gallo Arte Contemporáneo. Salamanca, España. Diciembre de 2000) ii) Line of 30 cm Tattooed on a Remunerated Person # 51 Regina Street. Mexico City, Mexico. May 1998 (Línea de 30 cm Tatuada Sobre un Persona Remunerada Calle Regina, # 51. México D.F., México. Mayo de 1998) black and white photographs with text each: 16 1/8 x 22 3/8 in. (41 x 56.8 cm) i) Executed in 2000, this work is from an edition of 10. ii) Executed in 1998, this work is from an edition of 10. Estimate $10,000-15,000

Provenance Private Collection, Miami Exhibited i) Reykjavik, Reykjavik Art Museum, Santiago Sierra The Black Cone. Monument to Civil Disobedience, 2012 (another example exhibited) ii) London, Lisson Gallery, 7 Trabajos / 7 Works, November 2007 (another example exhibited) Literature i) Santiago Sierra, exh. cat., Galerie Peter Kilchmann and Galería Enrique Guerrero, Zurich, 2001, p. 18 (another example illustrated) i) Santiago Sierra: Works 2002-1990, exh. cat., Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, 2002, pp. 52-53 (another example illustrated) i) Rosa Martínez, Cuauhtémoc Medina and Ana Palacios, ed., Santiago Sierra, Pabellón de España, 50a Bienal de Venecia / Spanish Pavillion, 50th Venice Biennale”, Venice, 2003, pp. 119-120 (another example illustrated) i) Eckhard Schneider, ed. 300 Tons and Previous Works, Dusseldorf, 2004, pp. 94-95 (another example illustrated) i) Fabio Cavallucci and Carlos Jiménez, Santiago Sierra, Milano, 2005, p.92 (another example illustrated) i) Santiago Sierra - The Black Cone. Monument to Civil Disobedience, exh. cat., Reykjavik Art Museum, Reykjavik, 2012, p. 27 (another example illustrated)

ii) Santiago Sierra, exh. cat., Galerie Peter Kilchmann and Galería Enrique Guerrero, Zurich, 2001, p. 14 (another example illustrated) ii) Santiago Sierra: Works 2002-1990, exh. cat., Ikon Gallery, Birmingham, 2002, p. 2 (another example illustrated) ii) Santiago Sierra, exh. cat., Kunsthalle Wien Project Space, Vienna, 2002, p. 39 (another example illustrated) ii) Rosa Martínez, Cuauhtémoc Medina and Ana Palacios, ed., Santiago Sierra, Pabellón de España, 50a Bienal de Venecia / Spanish Pavillion, 50th Venice Biennale”, Venice, 2003, p. 117 (another example illustrated) ii) Eckhard Schneider, ed. 300 Tons and PRevious Works, Dusseldorf, 2004, p. 27 (another example illustrated) ii) Fabio Cavallucci and Carlos Jiménez, Santiago Sierra, Milano, 2005, p. 128 (another example illustrated) ii) Mariana David, Pilar Villela Mascaró, Alvaro Vásquez Mantecón, Taiyana Pimentel, Francisco Javier San Martín, Paromita Vohra, 7 Trabajos / 7 works, London, 2007, p. 28 (another example illustrated)

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(i)

(ii)

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99. Jorge Pedro Núñez

b. 1976 Venezuela

Ritmocolor (EMI) vinyl discs sleeves and cardboard 36 5/8 x 11 x 12 1/2 in. (93 x 27.9 x 31.8 cm) Executed in 2012, it is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by the artist. Estimate $12,000-18,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

100. José Antonio Hernández-Díez

Venezuela b. 1964

Hegel chromogenic print 90 1/4 x 55 1/4 in. (229.2 x 140.3 cm) Executed in 2001, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by the artist. Estimate $10,000-15,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner Exhibited New York, New Museum of Contemporary Art, José Antonio Hernandez-Diez, July 11-September 21, 2003 Literature José Antonio Hernández-Diez, exh. cat., The New Museum, 2003, p. 72 (illustrated)

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101. JosĂŠ Antonio HernĂĄndez Diez

Venezuela b. 1964

Valdemar black screen, nail and projector 19 1/2 x 15 1/2 x 2 in. (49.5 x 39.4 x 5.1 cm) Executed in 1992, this work comes accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by the artist. Estimate $10,000-15,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner

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102. Daniel Senise

Brazil b. 1955

R. Silvio Romero, 34 DEZ/09 I signed “Daniel Senise” on the reverse ink jet print with artist’s interventions on aluminum 59 x 62 in. (149.9 x 157.5 cm) Executed in 2010. Estimate $8,000-12,000 Provenance Galeria Vermelho, São Paulo Acquired from the above by the present owner Exhibited London, Gallery 32, Daniel Senise, March 2010 Rio de Janeiro, Casa França Brasil, Daniel Senise 2892, 2011

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103. Nicola Costantino

Argentine b. 1964

Male Nipples Hermès Handbags, Kelly (from the series ‘Human Furriery’) leather and silicone 14 1/2 x 12 x 6 5/8 in. (36.8 x 30.5 x 16.8 cm) Executed in 2006. Estimate $5,000-7,000 Provenance Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner Exhibited Lausanne, Claude Verdan Foundation, Human Skin, 2011 New York, Chelsea Art Museum, Naples PAN Dangerous Beauty, 2007 Taipei, Museum of Contemporary Art, Fashion Accidentally, 2007 Literature Carlos Kuri, Nicola Costantino, Berlin, 2013, pp. 36-37 (illustrated)

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104. Ernesto Neto

Brazil b. 1964

Untitled polymide stretch fabric, lycra, tulle, and styrofoam and polypropylene pellets 7 x 29 x 40 in. (17.8 x 73.7 x 101.6 cm) Executed circa 2004. Estimate $12,000-18,000 Provenance Galeria Fortes Vilaรงa, Sรฃo Paulo Acquired from the above by the present owner

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105. Nelson Leirner

Brazil b. 1932

Figurativismo abstrato stickers on wood 62 x 77 7/8 in. (157.5 x 197.8 cm) Executed in 2004, this work is accompanied by a certifcate of authenticity issued by Gabrielle Maubrie Gallery. Estimate $18,000-22,000 Provenance Private Collection, Los Angeles

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Index Arcay, W. 28

Ferrari, L. 51, 88, 89

Oliveira, H. 50 Ortega, D. 8

Arden-Quin, C. 78 Arrechea, A. 36

Galán, J. 85

Asis, A. 74

Galan, M. 95

Os Gêmeos 3

Garaicoa, C. 94

Palma, M. 4

Barney, A. 68

Goeritz, M. 14

Pape, L. 11

Barroso, A. 92

Grippo, V. 80

Piqueras, J. 59

Bedia, J. 83, 90

Guayasamín, O. 23

Polesello, R. 77 Portinari, C. 18

Berni, A. 73 Biswell, K.P. 65

Hernández, S. 40

Bravo, M. 64

Hernández Diez, J.A. 100, 101

Ramírez, M. 21

Bruguera, T. 91, 93

Herrero, F. 57, 58

Ramos Martínez, A. 19

Hoyos, A.M. 66

Rayo, O. 71, 86 Rheingantz, M. 42

Carreño, M. 25, 26 Carrington, L. 15

Jaar, A. 2, 60

Corratgé, S. 33

Kuitca, G. 41, 56

Rojas, C. 54, 55 Rosabal, J. 34

Cruz-Diez, C. 9, 52 Cruzvillegas, A. 7

Rivera, D. 16, 17 Roche Rabell, A. 37

Costantino, N. 103

Lam, W. 24 Lauand, J. 75

Sargent, F. 62

Da Costa, M. 39

Le Parc, J. 72

Schendel, M. 44

Damasceno, J. 49

Leirner, N. 105

Senise, D. 102

Darié, S. 29

Lizarazo, L.A. 67

Sierra, S. 98

de Amaral, O. 5, 61

Los Carpinteros 1

Sodi, B. 81 Soldevilla, L. 27

de Castro, A. 45

Soto, J.R. 53

de Castro, W. 13

Maggi, M. 87

de Oraá, P. 32

Maiolino, A.M. 10, 96

Diago, J.R. 84

Matta 38

Tamayo, R. 20

Dias, A. 46

Mendive, M. 35

Tunga 47

Mijares, J. 30, 31 Echeverri, C. 69

Milhazes, B. 6

Vega, S. 82 Verzutti, E. 43

Eielson, J. 12 Escallón, M.E. 63

Narváez, F. 22

Escobar, D. 97

Negret, E. 70

Espinoza, E. 79

Neto, Ernesto 48, 104

Zerbini, L. 76

Nuñez, J.P. 99

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6. Beatriz Milhazes

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Guide for Prospective Buyers Buying at Auction The following pages are designed to ofer you information on how to buy at auction at Phillips. Our staf will be happy to assist you.

Pre-Auction Viewing Pre-auction viewings are open to the public and free of charge. Our specialists are available to give advice and condition reports at viewings or by appointment.

Conditions of Sale The Conditions of Sale and Authorship Warranty which appear later in this catalogue govern the auction. Bidders are strongly encouraged to read them as they outline the legal relationship among Phillips, the seller and the buyer and describe the terms upon which property is bought at auction. Please be advised that Phillips generally acts as agent for the seller.

Electrical and Mechanical Lots All lots with electrical and/or mechanical features are sold on the basis of their decorative value only and should not be assumed to be operative. It is essential that, prior to any intended use, the electrical system is verifed and approved by a qualifed electrician.

Buyer’s Premium Phillips charges the successful bidder a commission, or buyer’s premium, on the hammer price of each lot sold. The buyer’s premium is payable by the buyer as part of the total purchase price at the following rates: 25% of the hammer price up to and including $200,000, 20% of the portion of the hammer price above $200,000 up to and including $3,000,000 and 12% of the portion of the hammer price above $3,000,000. 1 Prior to Auction Catalogue Subscriptions If you would like to purchase a catalogue for this auction or any other Phillips sale, please contact us at +1 212 940 1240 or +44 20 7318 4010. Pre-Sale Estimates Pre-sale estimates are intended as a guide for prospective buyers. Any bid within the high and low estimate range should, in our opinion, ofer a chance of success. However, many lots achieve prices below or above the pre-sale estimates. Where “Estimate on Request” appears, please contact the specialist department for further information. It is advisable to contact us closer to the time of the auction as estimates can be subject to revision. Pre-sale estimates do not include the buyer’s premium or any applicable taxes. Pre-Sale Estimates in Pounds Sterling and Euros Although the sale is conducted in US dollars, the pre-sale estimates in the auction catalogues may also be printed in pounds sterling and/or euros. Since the exchange rate is that at the time of catalogue production and not at the date of auction, you should treat estimates in pounds sterling or euros as a guide only. Catalogue Entries Phillips may print in the catalogue entry the history of ownership of a work of art, as well as the exhibition history of the property and references to the work in art publications. While we are careful in the cataloguing process, provenance, exhibition and literature references may not be exhaustive and in some cases we may intentionally refrain from disclosing the identity of previous owners. Please note that all dimensions of the property set forth in the catalogue entry are approximate. Condition of Lots Our catalogues include references to condition only in the descriptions of multiple works (e.g., prints). Such references, though, do not amount to a full description of condition. The absence of reference to the condition of a lot in the catalogue entry does not imply that the lot is free from faults or imperfections. Solely as a convenience to clients, Phillips may provide condition reports. In preparing such reports, our specialists assess the condition in a manner appropriate to the estimated value of the property and the nature of the auction in which it is included. While condition reports are prepared honestly and carefully, our staf are not professional restorers or trained conservators. We therefore encourage all prospective buyers to inspect the property at the pre-sale exhibitions and recommend, particularly in the case of any lot of signifcant value, that you retain your own restorer or professional advisor to report to you on the property’s condition prior to bidding. Any prospective buyer of photographs or prints should always request a condition report because all such property is sold unframed, unless otherwise indicated in the condition report. If a lot is sold framed, Phillips accepts no liability for the condition of the frame. If we sell any lot unframed, we will be pleased to refer the purchaser to a professional framer.

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Symbol Key The following key explains the symbols you may see inside this catalogue. O ♦ Guaranteed Property The seller of lots designated with the symbol O has been guaranteed a minimum price fnanced solely by Phillips. Where the guarantee is provided by a third party or jointly by us and a third party, the property will be denoted with the symbols O ♦. When a third party has fnanced all or part of our fnancial interest in a lot, it assumes all or part of the risk that the lot will not be sold and will be remunerated accordingly. The compensation will be a fxed fee, a percentage of the hammer price or the buyer’s premium or some combination of the foregoing. The third party may bid on the guaranteed lot during the auction. If the third party is the successful bidder, the remuneration may be netted against the fnal purchase price. If the lot is not sold, the third party may incur a loss. Where Phillips has guaranteed a minimum price on every lot in the catalogue, Phillips will not designate each lot with the symbol(s) for the guaranteed property but will state our fnancial interest at the front of the catalogue. ∆ Property in Which Phillips Has an Ownership Interest Lots with this symbol indicate that Phillips owns the lot in whole or in part or has an economic interest in the lot equivalent to an ownership interest. No Reserve •Unless indicated by a •, all lots in this catalogue are ofered subject to a reserve. A reserve is the confdential value established between Phillips and the seller and below which a lot may not be sold. The reserve for each lot is generally set at a percentage of the low estimate and will not exceed the low pre-sale estimate. ∑ Endangered Species Lots with this symbol have been identifed at the time of cataloguing as containing endangered or other protected species of wildlife which may be subject to restrictions regarding export or import and which may require permits for export as well as import. Please refer to Paragraph 4 of the Guide for Prospective Buyers and Paragraph 11 of the Conditions of Sale.

2 Bidding in the Sale Bidding at Auction Bids may be executed during the auction in person by paddle, by telephone, online or prior to the sale in writing by absentee bid. Proof of identity in the form of government issued identifcation will be required, as will an original signature. We may also require that you furnish us with a bank reference. Bidding in Person To bid in person, you will need to register for and collect a paddle before the auction begins. New clients are encouraged to register at least 48 hours in advance of a sale to allow sufcient time for us to process your information. All lots sold will be invoiced to the name and address to which the paddle has been registered and invoices cannot be transferred to other names and addresses. Please do not misplace your paddle. In the event you lose it, inform a Phillips staf member immediately. At the end of the auction, please return your paddle to the registration desk. Bidding by Telephone If you cannot attend the auction, you may bid live on the telephone with one of our multi-lingual staf members. This service must be arranged at least 24 hours in advance of the sale and is available for lots whose low pre-sale estimate is at least $1,000. Telephone bids may be recorded. By bidding on the telephone, you consent to the recording of your conversation. We suggest that you leave a maximum bid, excluding the buyer’s premium and any applicable taxes, which we can execute on your behalf in the event we are unable to reach you by telephone.

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Online Bidding If you cannot attend the auction in person, you may bid online on our online live bidding platform available on our website at www.phillips.com. The digital saleroom is optimized to run on Google Chrome, Firefox, Opera and Internet Explorer browsers. Clients who wish to run the platform on Safari will need to install Adobe FlashPlayer. Follow the links to ‘Auctions’ and ‘Digital Saleroom’ and then pre-register by clicking on ‘Register to Bid Live.’ The frst time you register you will be required to create an account; thereafer you will only need to register for each sale. You must pre-register at least 24 hours before the start of the auction in order to be approved by our bid department. Please note that corporate frewalls may cause difculties for online bidders. Absentee Bids If you are unable to attend the auction and cannot participate by telephone, Phillips will be happy to execute written bids on your behalf. A bidding form can be found at the back of this catalogue. This service is free and confdential. Bids must be placed in the currency of the sale. Our staf will attempt to execute an absentee bid at the lowest possible price taking into account the reserve and other bidders. Always indicate a maximum bid, excluding the buyer’s premium and any applicable taxes. Unlimited bids will not be accepted. Any absentee bid must be received at least 24 hours in advance of the sale. In the event of identical bids, the earliest bid received will take precedence. Employee Bidding Employees of Phillips and our afliated companies, including the auctioneer, may bid at the auction by placing absentee bids so long as they do not know the reserve when submitting their absentee bids and otherwise comply with our employee bidding procedures. Bidding Increments Bidding generally opens below the low estimate and advances in increments of up to 10%, subject to the auctioneer’s discretion. Absentee bids that do not conform to the increments set below may be lowered to the next bidding increment. $50 to $1,000 $1,000 to $2,000 $2,000 to $3,000 $3,000 to $5,000 $5,000 to $10,000 $10,000 to $20,000 $20,000 to $30,000 $30,000 to $50,000 $50,000 to $100,000 $100,000 to $200,000 above $200,000

by $50s by $100s by $200s by $200s, 500, 800 (i.e., $4,200, 4,500, 4,800) by $500s by $1,000s by $2,000s by $2,000s, 5,000, 8,000 by $5,000s by $10,000s auctioneer’s discretion

The auctioneer may vary the increments during the course of the auction at his or her own discretion. 3 The Auction Conditions of Sale As noted above, the auction is governed by the Conditions of Sale and Authorship Warranty. All prospective bidders should read them carefully. They may be amended by saleroom addendum or auctioneer’s announcement.

the bidding from that amount. Absentee bids on no reserve lots will, in the absence of a higher bid, be executed at approximately 50% of the low pre-sale estimate or at the amount of the bid if it is less than 50% of the low pre-sale estimate. If there is no bid whatsoever on a no reserve lot, the auctioneer may deem such lot unsold. 4 Afer the Auction Payment Buyers are required to pay for purchases immediately following the auction unless other arrangements are agreed with Phillips in writing in advance of the sale. Payment must be made in US dollars either by cash, check drawn on a US bank or wire transfer, as noted in Paragraph 6 of the Conditions of Sale. It is our corporate policy not to make or accept single or multiple payments in cash or cash equivalents in excess of US$10,000. Credit Cards As a courtesy to clients, Phillips will accept American Express, Visa and Mastercard to pay for invoices of $100,000 or less. A processing fee will apply. Collection It is our policy to request proof of identity on collection of a lot. A lot will be released to the buyer or the buyer’s authorized representative when Phillips has received full and cleared payment and we are not owed any other amount by the buyer. Promptly afer the auction, we will transfer all lots to our warehouse located at 29-09 37th Avenue in Long Island City, Queens, New York. All purchased lots should be collected at this location during our regular weekday business hours. As a courtesy to clients, we will upon request transfer purchased lots suitable for hand carry back to our premises at 450 Park Avenue, New York, New York for collection within 30 days following the date of the auction. We will levy removal, interest, storage and handling charges on uncollected lots. Loss or Damage Buyers are reminded that Phillips accepts liability for loss or damage to lots for a maximum of seven days following the auction. Transport and Shipping As a free service for buyers, Phillips will wrap purchased lots for hand carry only. Alternatively, we will either provide packing, handling and shipping services or coordinate with shipping agents in order to facilitate such services for property purchased at Phillips. In the event that the property is collected in New York by the buyer or the buyer’s designee (including any private carrier) for subsequent transport out of state, Phillips may be required by law to collect New York sales tax, regardless of the lot’s ultimate destination. Please refer to Paragraph 17 of the Conditions of Sale for more information. Export and Import Licenses Before bidding for any property, prospective bidders are advised to make independent inquiries as to whether a license is required to export the property from the United States or to import it into another country. It is the buyer’s sole responsibility to comply with all import and export laws and to obtain any necessary licenses or permits. The denial of any required license or permit or any delay in obtaining such documentation will not justify the cancellation of the sale or any delay in making full payment for the lot. Endangered Species

Interested Parties Announcement In situations where a person allowed to bid on a lot has a direct or indirect interest in such lot, such as the benefciary or executor of an estate selling the lot, a joint owner of the lot or a party providing or participating in a guarantee on the lot, Phillips will make an announcement in the saleroom that interested parties may bid on the lot. Consecutive and Responsive Bidding; No Reserve Lots The auctioneer may open the bidding on any lot by placing a bid on behalf of the seller. The auctioneer may further bid on behalf of the seller up to the amount of the reserve by placing consecutive bids or bids in response to other bidders. If a lot is ofered without reserve, unless there are already competing absentee bids, the auctioneer will generally open the bidding at 50% of the lot’s low presale estimate. In the absence of a bid at that level, the auctioneer will proceed backwards at his or her discretion until a bid is recognized and will then advance

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Items made of or incorporating plant or animal material, such as coral, crocodile, ivory, whalebone, Brazilian rosewood, rhinoceros horn or tortoiseshell, irrespective of age, percentage or value, may require a license or certifcate prior to exportation and additional licenses or certifcates upon importation to any foreign country. Please note that the ability to obtain an export license or certifcate does not ensure the ability to obtain an import license or certifcate in another country, and vice versa. We suggest that prospective bidders check with their own government regarding wildlife import requirements prior to placing a bid. It is the buyer’s sole responsibility to obtain any necessary export or import licenses or certifcates as well as any other required documentation. Please note that lots containing potentially regulated plant or animal material are marked as a convenience to our clients, but Phillips does not accept liability for errors or for failing to mark lots containing protected or regulated species.

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Conditions of Sale The Conditions of Sale and Authorship Warranty set forth below govern the relationship between bidders and buyers, on the one hand, and Phillips and sellers, on the other hand. All prospective buyers should read these Conditions of Sale and Authorship Warranty carefully before bidding. 1 Introduction Each lot in this catalogue is ofered for sale and sold subject to: (a) the Conditions of Sale and Authorship Warranty; (b) additional notices and terms printed in other places in this catalogue, including the Guide for Prospective Buyers, and (c) supplements to this catalogue or other written material posted by Phillips in the saleroom, in each case as amended by any addendum or announcement by the auctioneer prior to the auction. By bidding at the auction, whether in person, through an agent, by written bid, by telephone bid or other means, bidders and buyers agree to be bound by these Conditions of Sale, as so changed or supplemented, and Authorship Warranty. These Conditions of Sale, as so changed or supplemented, and Authorship Warranty contain all the terms on which Phillips and the seller contract with the buyer. 2 Phillips as Agent Phillips acts as an agent for the seller, unless otherwise indicated in this catalogue or at the time of auction. On occasion, Phillips may own a lot directly, in which case we will act in a principal capacity as a consignor, or a company afliated with Phillips may own a lot, in which case we will act as agent for that company, or Phillips or an afliated company may have a legal, benefcial or fnancial interest in a lot as a secured creditor or otherwise. 3 Catalogue Descriptions and Condition of Property Lots are sold subject to the Authorship Warranty, as described in the catalogue (unless such description is changed or supplemented, as provided in Paragraph 1 above) and in the condition that they are in at the time of the sale on the following basis. (a) The knowledge of Phillips in relation to each lot is partially dependent on information provided to us by the seller, and Phillips is not able to and does not carry out exhaustive due diligence on each lot. Prospective buyers acknowledge this fact and accept responsibility for carrying out inspections and investigations to satisfy themselves as to the lots in which they may be interested. Notwithstanding the foregoing, we shall exercise such reasonable care when making express statements in catalogue descriptions or condition reports as is consistent with our role as auctioneer of lots in this sale and in light of (i) the information provided to us by the seller, (ii) scholarship and technical knowledge and (iii) the generally accepted opinions of relevant experts, in each case at the time any such express statement is made. (b) Each lot ofered for sale at Phillips is available for inspection by prospective buyers prior to the auction. Phillips accepts bids on lots on the basis that bidders (and independent experts on their behalf, to the extent appropriate given the nature and value of the lot and the bidder’s own expertise) have fully inspected the lot prior to bidding and have satisfed themselves as to both the condition of the lot and the accuracy of its description. (c) Prospective buyers acknowledge that many lots are of an age and type which means that they are not in perfect condition. As a courtesy to clients, Phillips may prepare and provide condition reports to assist prospective buyers when they are inspecting lots. Catalogue descriptions and condition reports may make reference to particular imperfections of a lot, but bidders should note that lots may have other faults not expressly referred to in the catalogue or condition report. All dimensions are approximate. Illustrations are for identifcation purposes only and cannot be used as precise indications of size or to convey full information as to the actual condition of lots. (d) Information provided to prospective buyers in respect of any lot, including any pre-sale estimate, whether written or oral, and information in any catalogue, condition or other report, commentary or valuation, is not a representation of fact but rather a statement of opinion held by Phillips. Any pre-sale estimate may not be relied on as a prediction of the selling price or value of the lot and may be

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revised from time to time by Phillips in our absolute discretion. Neither Phillips nor any of our afliated companies shall be liable for any diference between the presale estimates for any lot and the actual price achieved at auction or upon resale. 4 Bidding at Auction (a) Phillips has absolute discretion to refuse admission to the auction or participation in the sale. All bidders must register for a paddle prior to bidding, supplying such information and references as required by Phillips. (b) As a convenience to bidders who cannot attend the auction in person, Phillips may, if so instructed by the bidder, execute written absentee bids on a bidder’s behalf. Absentee bidders are required to submit bids on the Absentee Bid Form, a copy of which is printed in this catalogue or otherwise available from Phillips. Bids must be placed in the currency of the sale. The bidder must clearly indicate the maximum amount he or she intends to bid, excluding the buyer’s premium and any applicable sales or use taxes. The auctioneer will not accept an instruction to execute an absentee bid which does not indicate such maximum bid. Our staf will attempt to execute an absentee bid at the lowest possible price taking into account the reserve and other bidders. Any absentee bid must be received at least 24 hours in advance of the sale. In the event of identical bids, the earliest bid received will take precedence. (c) Telephone bidders are required to submit bids on the Telephone Bid Form, a copy of which is printed in this catalogue or otherwise available from Phillips. Telephone bidding is available for lots whose low pre-sale estimate is at least $1,000. Phillips reserves the right to require written confrmation of a successful bid from a telephone bidder by fax or otherwise immediately afer such bid is accepted by the auctioneer. Telephone bids may be recorded and, by bidding on the telephone, a bidder consents to the recording of the conversation. (d) Bidders may participate in an auction by bidding online through Phillips’s online live bidding platform available on our website at www.phillips.com. To bid online, bidders must register online at least 24 hours before the start of the auction. Online bidding is subject to approval by Phillips’s bid department in our sole discretion. As noted in Paragraph 3 above, Phillips encourages online bidders to inspect prior to the auction any lot(s) on which they may bid, and condition reports are available upon request. Bidding in a live auction can progress quickly. To ensure that online bidders are not placed at a disadvantage when bidding against bidders in the room or on the telephone, the procedure for placing bids through Phillips’s online bidding platform is a one-step process. By clicking the bid button on the computer screen, a bidder submits a bid. Online bidders acknowledge and agree that bids so submitted are fnal and may not under any circumstances be amended or retracted. During a live auction, when bids other than online bids are placed, they will be displayed on the online bidder’s computer screen as ‘foor’ bids. ‘Floor’ bids include bids made by the auctioneer to protect the reserve. In the event that an online bid and a ‘foor’ or ‘phone’ bid are identical, the ‘foor’ bid may take precedence at the auctioneer’s discretion. The next bidding increment is shown for the convenience of online bidders in the bid button. The bidding increment available to online bidders may vary from the next bid actually taken by the auctioneer, as the auctioneer may deviate from Phillips’s standard increments at any time at his or her discretion, but an online bidder may only place a bid in a whole bidding increment. Phillips’s bidding increments are published in the Guide for Prospective Buyers. (e) When making a bid, whether in person, by absentee bid, on the telephone or online, a bidder accepts personal liability to pay the purchase price, as described more fully in Paragraph 6 (a) below, plus all other applicable charges unless it has been explicitly agreed in writing with Phillips before the commencement of the auction that the bidder is acting as agent on behalf of an identifed third party acceptable to Phillips and that we will only look to the principal for such payment. (f) By participating in the auction, whether in person, by absentee bid, on the telephone or online, each prospective buyer represents and warrants that any bids placed by such person, or on such person’s behalf, are not the product of any collusive or other anti-competitive agreement and are otherwise consistent with federal and state antitrust law. (g) Arranging absentee, telephone and online bids is a free service provided by Phillips to prospective buyers. While we undertake to exercise reasonable care in

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undertaking such activity, we cannot accept liability for failure to execute such bids except where such failure is caused by our willful misconduct. (h) Employees of Phillips and our afliated companies, including the auctioneer, may bid at the auction by placing absentee bids so long as they do not know the reserve when submitting their absentee bids and otherwise comply with our employee bidding procedures. 5 Conduct of the Auction (a) Unless otherwise indicated by the symbol •, each lot is ofered subject to a reserve, which is the confdential minimum selling price agreed by Phillips with the seller. The reserve will not exceed the low pre-sale estimate at the time of the auction. (b) The auctioneer has discretion at any time to refuse any bid, withdraw any lot, re-ofer a lot for sale (including afer the fall of the hammer) if he or she believes there may be error or dispute and take such other action as he or she deems reasonably appropriate. Phillips shall have no liability whatsoever for any such action taken by the auctioneer. If any dispute arises afer the sale, our sale record is conclusive. The auctioneer may accept bids made by a company afliated with Phillips provided that the bidder does not know the reserve placed on the lot. (c) The auctioneer will commence and advance the bidding at levels and in increments he or she considers appropriate. In order to protect the reserve on any lot, the auctioneer may place one or more bids on behalf of the seller up to the reserve without indicating he or she is doing so, either by placing consecutive bids or bids in response to other bidders. If a lot is ofered without reserve, unless there are already competing absentee bids, the auctioneer will generally open the bidding at 50% of the lot’s low pre-sale estimate. In the absence of a bid at that level, the auctioneer will proceed backwards at his or her discretion until a bid is recognized and will then advance the bidding from that amount. Absentee bids on no reserve lots will, in the absence of a higher bid, be executed at approximately 50% of the low pre-sale estimate or at the amount of the bid if it is less than 50% of the low pre-sale estimate. If there is no bid whatsoever on a no reserve lot, the auctioneer may deem such lot unsold. (d) The sale will be conducted in US dollars and payment is due in US dollars. For the beneft of international clients, pre-sale estimates in the auction catalogue may be shown in pounds sterling and/or euros and, if so, will refect approximate exchange rates. Accordingly, estimates in pounds sterling or euros should be treated only as a guide. If a currency converter is operated during the sale, it is done so as a courtesy to bidders, but Phillips accepts no responsibility for any errors in currency conversion calculation. (e) Subject to the auctioneer’s reasonable discretion, the highest bidder accepted by the auctioneer will be the buyer and the striking of the hammer marks the acceptance of the highest bid and the conclusion of a contract for sale between the seller and the buyer. Risk and responsibility for the lot passes to the buyer as set forth in Paragraph 7 below. (f) If a lot is not sold, the auctioneer will announce that it has been “passed,” “withdrawn,” “returned to owner” or “bought-in.” (g) Any post-auction sale of lots ofered at auction shall incorporate these Conditions of Sale and Authorship Warranty as if sold in the auction. 6 Purchase Price and Payment (a) The buyer agrees to pay us, in addition to the hammer price of the lot, the buyer’s premium and any applicable sales tax (the “Purchase Price”). The buyer’s premium is 25% of the hammer price up to and including $200,000, 20% of the portion of the hammer price above $200,000 up to and including $3,000,000 and 12% of the portion of the hammer price above $3,000,000. Phillips reserves the right to pay from our compensation an introductory commission to one or more third parties for assisting in the sale of property ofered and sold at auction. (b) Sales tax, use tax and excise and other taxes are payable in accordance with applicable law. All prices, fees, charges and expenses set out in these Conditions of Sale are quoted exclusive of applicable taxes. Phillips will only accept valid resale certifcates from US dealers as proof of exemption from sales tax. All foreign buyers should contact the Client Accounting Department about tax matters.

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(c) Unless otherwise agreed, a buyer is required to pay for a purchased lot immediately following the auction regardless of any intention to obtain an export or import license or other permit for such lot. Payments must be made by the invoiced party in US dollars either by cash, check drawn on a US bank or wire transfer, as follows: (i) Phillips will accept payment in cash provided that the total amount paid in cash or cash equivalents does not exceed US$10,000. Buyers paying in cash should do so in person at our Client Accounting Desk at 450 Park Avenue during regular weekday business hours. (ii) Personal checks and banker’s draf s are accepted if drawn on a US bank and the buyer provides to us acceptable government issued identifcation. Checks and banker’s draf s should be made payable to “Phillips.” If payment is sent by mail, please send the check or banker’s draf to the attention of the Client Accounting Department at 450 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10022 and make sure that the sale and lot number is written on the check. Checks or banker’s draf s drawn by third parties will not be accepted. (iii) Payment by wire transfer may be sent directly to Phillips. Bank transfer details: Citibank 322 West 23rd Street, New York, NY 10011 SWIFT Code: CITIUS33 ABA Routing: 021 000 089 For the account of Phillips Account no.: 58347736 Please reference the relevant sale and lot number. (d) As a courtesy to clients, Phillips will accept American Express, Visa and Mastercard to pay for invoices of $100,000 or less. A processing fee of 3.5% will apply. (e) Title in a purchased lot will not pass until Phillips has received the Purchase Price for that lot in cleared funds. Phillips is not obliged to release a lot to the buyer until title in the lot has passed and appropriate identifcation has been provided, and any earlier release does not afect the passing of title or the buyer’s unconditional obligation to pay the Purchase Price. 7 Collection of Property (a) Phillips will not release a lot to the buyer until we have received payment of its Purchase Price in full in cleared funds, the buyer has paid all outstanding amounts due to Phillips or any of our afliated companies, including any charges payable pursuant to Paragraph 8 (a) below, and the buyer has satisfed such other terms as we in our sole discretion shall require, including completing any anti-money laundering or anti-terrorism fnancing checks. As soon as a buyer has satisfed all of the foregoing conditions, he or she should contact our Shipping Department at +1 212 940 1372 or +1 212 940 1373 to arrange for collection of purchased property. (b) The buyer must arrange for collection of a purchased lot within seven days of the date of the auction. Promptly afer the auction, we will transfer all lots to our warehouse located at 29-09 37th Avenue in Long Island City, Queens, New York. All purchased lots should be collected at this location during our regular weekday business hours. As a courtesy to clients, Phillips will upon request transfer on a biweekly basis purchased lots suitable for hand-carry back to our premises at 450 Park Avenue, New York, New York for collection within 30 days following the date of the auction. Purchased lots are at the buyer’s risk, including the responsibility for insurance, from the earlier to occur of (i) the date of collection or (ii) seven days afer the auction. Until risk passes, Phillips will compensate the buyer for any loss or damage to a purchased lot up to a maximum of the Purchase Price paid, subject to our usual exclusions for loss or damage to property. (c) As a courtesy to clients, Phillips will, without charge, wrap purchased lots for hand-carry only. We will, at the buyer’s expense, either provide packing, handling, insurance and shipping services or coordinate with shipping agents instructed by the buyer in order to facilitate such services for property bought at Phillips. Any such instruction, whether or not made at our recommendation, is entirely at the buyer’s risk and responsibility, and we will not be liable for acts or omissions of third party packers or shippers. Third party shippers should contact us by telephone at +1 212 940 1376 or by fax at +1 212 924 6477 at least 24 hours in advance of collection in order to schedule pickup.

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(d) Phillips will require presentation of government issued identifcation prior to release of a lot to the buyer or the buyer’s authorized representative. 8 Failure to Collect Purchases (a) If the buyer pays the Purchase Price but fails to collect a purchased lot within 30 days of the auction, the buyer will incur a late collection fee of $10 per day for each uncollected lot. Additional charges may apply to oversized lots. We will not release purchased lots to the buyer until all such charges have been paid in full. (b) If a purchased lot is paid for but not collected within six months of the auction, the buyer authorizes Phillips, upon notice, to arrange a resale of the item by auction or private sale, with estimates and a reserve set at Phillips’s reasonable discretion. The proceeds of such sale will be applied to pay for storage charges and any other outstanding costs and expenses owed by the buyer to Phillips or our afliated companies and the remainder will be forfeited unless collected by the buyer within two years of the original auction. 9 Remedies for Non-Payment (a) Without prejudice to any rights the seller may have, if the buyer without prior agreement fails to make payment of the Purchase Price for a lot in cleared funds within seven days of the auction, Phillips may in our sole discretion exercise one or more of the following remedies: (i) store the lot at Phillips’s premises or elsewhere at the buyer’s sole risk and expense at the same rates as set forth in Paragraph 8 (a) above; (ii) cancel the sale of the lot, retaining any partial payment of the Purchase Price as liquidated damages; (iii) reject future bids from the buyer or render such bids subject to payment of a deposit; (iv) charge interest at 12% per annum from the date payment became due until the date the Purchase Price is received in cleared funds; (v) subject to notifcation of the buyer, exercise a lien over any of the buyer’s property which is in the possession of Phillips and instruct our afliated companies to exercise a lien over any of the buyer’s property which is in their possession and, in each case, no earlier than 30 days from the date of such notice, arrange the sale of such property and apply the proceeds to the amount owed to Phillips or any of our afliated companies afer the deduction from sale proceeds of our standard vendor’s commission and all sale-related expenses; (vi) resell the lot by auction or private sale, with estimates and a reserve set at Phillips reasonable discretion, it being understood that in the event such resale is for less than the original hammer price and buyer’s premium for that lot, the buyer will remain liable for the shortfall together with all costs incurred in such resale; (vii) commence legal proceedings to recover the hammer price and buyer’s premium for that lot, together with interest and the costs of such proceedings; (viii) set of the outstanding amount remaining unpaid by the buyer against any amounts which we or any of our afliated companies may owe the buyer in any other transactions; (ix) release the name and address of the buyer to the seller to enable the seller to commence legal proceedings to recover the amounts due and legal costs or (x) take such other action as we deem necessary or appropriate. (b) As security to us for full payment by the buyer of all outstanding amounts due to Phillips and our afliated companies, Phillips retains, and the buyer grants to us, a security interest in each lot purchased at auction by the buyer and in any other property or money of the buyer in, or coming into, our possession or the possession of one of our afliated companies. We may apply such money or deal with such property as the Uniform Commercial Code or other applicable law permits a secured creditor to do. In the event that we exercise a lien over property in our possession because the buyer is in default to one of our afliated companies, we will so notify the buyer. Our security interest in any individual lot will terminate upon actual delivery of the lot to the buyer or the buyer’s agent. (c) In the event the buyer is in default of payment to any of our afliated companies, the buyer also irrevocably authorizes Phillips to pledge the buyer’s property in our possession by actual or constructive delivery to our afliated company as security for the payment of any outstanding amount due. Phillips will notify the buyer if the buyer’s property has been delivered to an afliated company by way of pledge. 10 Rescission by Phillips Phillips shall have the right, but not the obligation, to rescind a sale without notice to the buyer if we reasonably believe that there is a material breach of the seller’s representations and warranties or the Authorship Warranty or an adverse claim is made by a third party. Upon notice of Phillips’s election to rescind the sale, the

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buyer will promptly return the lot to Phillips, and we will then refund the Purchase Price paid to us. As described more fully in Paragraph 13 below, the refund shall constitute the sole remedy and recourse of the buyer against Phillips and the seller with respect to such rescinded sale. 11 Export, Import and Endangered Species Licenses and Permits Before bidding for any property, prospective buyers are advised to make their own inquiries as to whether a license is required to export a lot from the US or to import it into another country. Prospective buyers are advised that some countries prohibit the import of property made of or incorporating plant or animal material, such as coral, crocodile, ivory, whalebone, Brazilian rosewood, rhinoceros horn or tortoiseshell, irrespective of age, percentage or value. Accordingly, prior to bidding, prospective buyers considering export of purchased lots should familiarize themselves with relevant export and import regulations of the countries concerned. It is solely the buyer’s responsibility to comply with these laws and to obtain any necessary export, import and endangered species licenses or permits. Failure to obtain a license or permit or delay in so doing will not justify the cancellation of the sale or any delay in making full payment for the lot. As a courtesy to clients, Phillips has marked in the catalogue lots containing potentially regulated plant or animal material, but we do not accept liability for errors or for failing to mark lots containing protected or regulated species. 12 Data Protection (a) In connection with the supply of auction and related services, or as required by law, Phillips may ask clients to provide personal data. Phillips may take and retain a copy of government-issued identifcation such as a passport or driver’s license. We will use your personal data (i) to provide auction and related services; (ii) to enforce these Conditions of Sale; (iii) to carry out identity and credit checks; (iv) to implement and improve the management and operations of our business and (v) for other purposes set out in our Privacy Policy published on the Phillips website at www.phillips.com (the ‘Privacy Policy’) and available on request by emailing dataprotection@phillips.com. By agreeing to these Conditions of Sale, you consent to our use of your personal data, including sensitive personal data, in accordance with the Privacy Policy. The personal data we may collect and process is listed, and sensitive personal data is defned, in our Privacy Policy. Phillips may also, from time to time, send you promotional and marketing materials about us and our services. If you would prefer not to receive such information, please email us at dataprotection@phillips.com. Please also email us at this address to receive information about your personal data or to advise us if the personal data we hold about you is inaccurate or out of date. (b) In order to provide our services, we may disclose your personal data to third parties, including professional advisors, shippers and credit agencies. We will disclose, share with and transfer your personal data to Phillips’s afliated persons (natural or legal) for administration, sale and auction related purposes. You expressly consent to such transfer of your personal data. We will not sell, rent or otherwise transfer any of your personal data to third parties except as otherwise expressly provided in this Paragraph 12. (c) Phillips’s premises may be subject to video surveillance and recording. Telephone calls (e.g., telephone bidding) may also be recorded. We may process that information in accordance with our Privacy Policy. 13 Limitation of Liability (a) Subject to subparagraph (e) below, the total liability of Phillips, our afliated companies and the seller to the buyer in connection with the sale of a lot shall be limited to the Purchase Price actually paid by the buyer for the lot. (b) Except as otherwise provided in this Paragraph 13, none of Phillips, any of our afliated companies or the seller (i) is liable for any errors or omissions, whether orally or in writing, in information provided to prospective buyers by Phillips or any of our afliated companies or (ii) accepts responsibility to any bidder in respect of acts or omissions, whether negligent or otherwise, by Phillips or any of our afliated companies in connection with the conduct of the auction or for any other matter relating to the sale of any lot. (c) All warranties other than the Authorship Warranty, express or implied, including any warranty of satisfactory quality and ftness for purpose, are

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specifcally excluded by Phillips, our afliated companies and the seller to the fullest extent permitted by law. (d) Subject to subparagraph (e) below, none of Phillips, any of our afliated companies or the seller shall be liable to the buyer for any loss or damage beyond the refund of the Purchase Price referred to in subparagraph (a) above, whether such loss or damage is characterized as direct, indirect, special, incidental or consequential, or for the payment of interest on the Purchase Price to the fullest extent permitted by law. (e) No provision in these Conditions of Sale shall be deemed to exclude or limit the liability of Phillips or any of our afliated companies to the buyer in respect of any fraud or fraudulent misrepresentation made by any of us or in respect of death or personal injury caused by our negligent acts or omissions. 14 Copyright The copyright in all images, illustrations and written materials produced by or for Phillips relating to a lot, including the contents of this catalogue, is and shall remain at all times the property of Phillips and such images and materials may not be used by the buyer or any other party without our prior written consent. Phillips and the seller make no representations or warranties that the buyer of a lot will acquire any copyright or other reproduction rights in it. 15 General (a) These Conditions of Sale, as changed or supplemented as provided in Paragraph 1 above, and Authorship Warranty set out the entire agreement between the parties with respect to the transactions contemplated herein and supersede all prior and contemporaneous written, oral or implied understandings, representations and agreements. (b) Notices to Phillips shall be in writing and addressed to the department in charge of the sale, quoting the reference number specifed at the beginning of the sale catalogue. Notices to clients shall be addressed to the last address notifed by them in writing to Phillips. (c) These Conditions of Sale are not assignable by any buyer without our prior written consent but are binding on the buyer’s successors, assigns and representatives. (d) Should any provision of these Conditions of Sale be held void, invalid or unenforceable for any reason, the remaining provisions shall remain in full force and efect. No failure by any party to exercise, nor any delay in exercising, any right or remedy under these Conditions of Sale shall act as a waiver or release thereof in whole or in part. 16 Law and Jurisdiction (a) The rights and obligations of the parties with respect to these Conditions of Sale and Authorship Warranty, the conduct of the auction and any matters related to any of the foregoing shall be governed by and interpreted in accordance with laws of the State of New York, excluding its conficts of law rules. (b) Phillips, all bidders and all sellers agree to the exclusive jurisdiction of the (i) state courts of the State of New York located in New York City and (ii) the federal courts for the Southern and Eastern Districts of New York to settle all disputes arising in connection with all aspects of all matters or transactions to which these Conditions of Sale and Authorship Warranty relate or apply. (c) All bidders and sellers irrevocably consent to service of process or any other documents in connection with proceedings in any court by facsimile transmission, personal service, delivery by mail or in any other manner permitted by New York law or the law of the place of service, at the last address of the bidder or seller known to Phillips. 17 Sales Tax (a) Unless the buyer has delivered a valid certifcate evidencing exemption from tax, the buyer shall pay applicable New York, California, Colorado, Florida or Washington sales tax on any lot picked up or delivered anywhere in the states of New York, California, Colorado, Florida or Washington.

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(b) If the point of delivery or transfer of possession for any purchased lot to the buyer or the buyer’s designee (including any private carrier) occurs in New York, then the sale is subject to New York sales tax at the existing rate of 8.875%. (c) If the buyer arranges shipping for any purchased lot in New York by: (i) a common carrier (such as the United States Postal Service, United Parcel Service, or FedEx) that does not operate under a private agreement or contract with negotiated terms to be delivered to an out of state destination; or (ii) a freight forwarder registered with the Transportation Security Administration (“TSA”) to be delivered outside of the United States, then the sale is not subject to New York sales tax.

Authorship Warranty Phillips warrants the authorship of property in this auction catalogue described in headings in bold or CAPITALIZED type for a period of fve years from date of sale by Phillips, subject to the exclusions and limitations set forth below. (a) Phillips gives this Authorship Warranty only to the original buyer of record (i.e., the registered successful bidder) of any lot. This Authorship Warranty does not extend to (i) subsequent owners of the property, including purchasers or recipients by way of gif from the original buyer, heirs, successors, benefciaries and assigns; (ii) property where the description in the catalogue states that there is a confict of opinion on the authorship of the property; (iii) property where our attribution of authorship was on the date of sale consistent with the generally accepted opinions of specialists, scholars or other experts; (iv) property whose description or dating is proved inaccurate by means of scientifc methods or tests not generally accepted for use at the time of the publication of the catalogue or which were at such time deemed unreasonably expensive or impractical to use or likely in our reasonable opinion to have caused damage or loss in value to the lot or (v) property where there has been no material loss in value from the value of the lot had it been as described in the heading of the catalogue entry. (b) In any claim for breach of the Authorship Warranty, Phillips reserves the right, as a condition to rescinding any sale under this warranty, to require the buyer to provide to us at the buyer’s expense the written opinions of two recognized experts approved in advance by Phillips. We shall not be bound by any expert report produced by the buyer and reserve the right to consult our own experts at our expense. If Phillips agrees to rescind a sale under the Authorship Warranty, we shall refund to the buyer the reasonable costs charged by the experts commissioned by the buyer and approved in advance by us. (c) Subject to the exclusions set forth in subparagraph (a) above, the buyer may bring a claim for breach of the Authorship Warranty provided that (i) he or she has notifed Phillips in writing within three months of receiving any information which causes the buyer to question the authorship of the lot, specifying the auction in which the property was included, the lot number in the auction catalogue and the reasons why the authorship of the lot is being questioned and (ii) the buyer returns the lot to Phillips to the saleroom in which it was purchased in the same condition as at the time of its auction and is able to transfer good and marketable title in the lot free from any third party claim arising afer the date of the auction. Phillips has discretion to waive any of the foregoing requirements set forth in this subparagraph (c) or subparagraph (b) above. (d) The buyer understands and agrees that the exclusive remedy for any breach of the Authorship Warranty shall be rescission of the sale and refund of the original Purchase Price paid. This remedy shall constitute the sole remedy and recourse of the buyer against Phillips, any of our afliated companies and the seller and is in lieu of any other remedy available as a matter of law or equity. This means that none of Phillips, any of our afliated companies or the seller shall be liable for loss or damage beyond the remedy expressly provided in this Authorship Warranty, whether such loss or damage is characterized as direct, indirect, special, incidental or consequential, or for the payment of interest on the original Purchase Price.

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Executive Management Chairman & CEO Edward Dolman Senior Directors Jean-Paul Engelen Henry Allsopp Vanessa Hallett Cary Leibowitz Zach Miner Scott Nussbaum Peter Sumner Kelly Troester

Worldwide Deputy Chairman Svetlana Marich

Chief of Staf Lisa King

Deputy Chairman Robert Manley

Chief Financial Ofcer Annette Schwaer

Deputy Chairman, Europe & Asia and International Head of Business Development Matt Carey-Williams

Chief Creative & Marketing Ofcer Damien Whitmore

Senior Consultants Aurel Bacs Livia Russo

Deputy Chairman, Europe & Asia Finn Schouenborg Dombernowsky Alexander Payne

Chief Counsel Richard Aydon

Senior Advisors to Chairman & CEO Hugues Joffre, Chairman, UK & Europe Francesco Bonami Arnold Lehman

Deputy Chairman, Asia Jonathan Crockett Sam Hines

Directors Alex Heminway Nazgol Jahan Paul Maudsley

Chief Operating Ofcer, Americas Sean Cleary Chief Operating Ofcer, UK Europe & Asia Frank Lasry

Deputy Chairman, Americas August O. Uribe

International Business Directors Bart van Son, 20th Century & Contemporary Art Myriam Christinaz, Jewelry, Watches, & Business Development Senior Directors, Human Resources Jennifer Garvin Nicola Mason Strategy Projects Director Caroline Conegliano

International Specialists & Regional Directors Chicago Carol Ehlers Specialist, Consultant +1 773 230 9192

Los Angeles Blake Koh Regional Director +1 323 383 3266

Cologne Dr. Alice Trier Specialist +49 173 25 111 69

Mexico Cecilia Laffan Regional Director +52 1 55 5413 9468

Denver Melyora de Koning Senior Specialist +1 917 657 7193

Miami Valentina Garcia Specialist +1 917583 4983

Geneva Oksana Katchaluba Specialist +41 22 906 80 00

Moscow Kalista Fenina Specialist +7 905 741 15 15

Italy Carolina Lanfranchi Specialist, Consultant +39 33 8924 1720

Paris Maria Cifuentes Caruncho Specialist +33 142 78 67 77

Istanbul Deniz Atac Specialist, Consultant +90 533 374 1198

Portugal Maura Marvão Specialist, Consultant +351 917 564 427

Japan Kyoki Hattori Regional Director +81 90 2245 6678

Seattle Silvia Coxe Waltner Regional Director +1 206 604 6695

Korea Jane Yoon International Specialist +82 10 7389 7714

Taiwan Cindy Yen Specialist +886 963 135 449

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Chief Communications & PR Ofcer Michael Sherman

Associate General Counsel Jonathan Illari

Worldwide Offices Sale Rooms

Regional Ofces

New York 450 Park Avenue New York, NY 10022, USA tel +1 212 940 1200 fax +1 212 940 1378

Istanbul Meclisi Mebusan Caddesi Deniz Apartmani No. 79/8 Istanbul Beyoglu 34427, Turkey tel +90 533 374 1198

London 30 Berkeley Square London W1J 6EX, United Kingdom tel +44 20 7318 4010 fax +44 20 7318 4011

Milan Via Monte di Pietà, 1/A Milan 20121

Geneva 15 quai de l’Ile 1204 Geneva, Switzerland tel +41 22 317 81 81 fax +41 22 317 81 80 Hong Kong Room 1301-13/F, York House, The Landmark Building, 15 Queen’s Road Central, Hong Kong tel +852 2318 2000 fax +852 2318 2002

Moscow Nikolskaya Str 19–21, 5th foor, 109012 Moscow, Russia tel +7 495 225 88 22 fax +7 495 225 88 87 Paris 46 rue du Bac, 75007 Paris, France tel +33 1 42 78 67 77 fax +33 1 42 78 23 07

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Specialists and Departments 20th Century & Contemporary Art Jean-Paul Engelen, Worldwide Co-Head 20th Century & Contemporary Art Robert Manley, Worldwide Co-Head of 20th Century & Contemporary Art Jonathan Crockett, Head of 20th Century & Contemporary Art, Asia August O. Uribe Bart Van Son New York Scott Nussbaum, Head of 20th Century & Contemporary Art, New York Kate Bryan, Head of Evening Sale John McCord, Head of Day Sale Rebekah Bowling, Head of New Now Sale Zach Miner Rachel Adler Rosan Kevie Yang Karen Garka-Prince Amanda Lo Iacono Katherine Lukacher Samuel Mansour Annie Dolan Paula Campolieto Carolyn Mayer Maiya Aiba London Peter Sumner, Head of Contemporary Art, London Henry Highley, Head of Evening Sale Tamila Kerimova, Head of Day Sale & New Now Jonathan Horwich Nathalie Zaquin-Boulakia Matthew Langton Iori Endo Simon Tovey Alex Dolman Ava Carleton-Williams Chiara Panarello Florencia Moscova Hong Kong Jane Yoon Sandy Ma Charlotte Raybaud Annie Tang Latin American Art Henry Allsopp, Worldwide Head Kaeli Deane, Head of Sale Valentina Garcia Carolina Scarborough Isabel Suarez

Design Alexander Payne, Worldwide Head, Design +1 212 940 1390 +44 20 7318 7923 +852 2318 2023 +1 212 940 1208 +44 20 7318 7912

+1 212 940 1354 +1 212 940 1267 +1 212 940 1261 +1 212 940 1250 +1 212 940 1256 +1 212 940 1333 +1 212 940 1254 +1 212 940 1204 +1 212 940 1260 +1 212 940 1215 +1 212 940 1219 +1 212 940 1288 +1 212 940 1255 +1 212 940 1212 +1 212 940 1387 +44 20 7318 4063 +44 20 7318 4061 +44 20 7318 4065 +44 20 7901 7935 +44 20 7901 7931 +44 20 7318 4074 +44 20 7318 4039 +44 20 7318 4084 +44 20 7901 7911 +44 20 7901 7904 +44 20 7318 4073 +44 20 7318 4082 +82 10 7389 7714 +852 2318 2025 +852 2318 2026 +852 2318 2024

+44 20 7318 4060 +1 212 940 1352 +1 917 583 4983 +1 212 940 1391 +1 212 940 1227

Modern and Contemporary Editions Cary Leibowitz, Worldwide Co-Head Kelly Troester, Worldwide Co-Head

+1 212 940 1222 +1 212 940 1221

New York Jannah Greenblatt Jason Osborne Kaissa Karhu

+1 212 940 1332 +1 212 940 1322 +1 212 940 1238

London Robert Kennan, Head of Editions, Europe Anne Schneider-Wilson Ross Thomas Rebecca Tooby-Desmond

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+44 20 7318 4075 +44 20 7318 4042 +44 20 7318 4077 +44 20 7318 4079

New York Alex Heminway, New York Director Meaghan Roddy Cordelia Lembo, Head of Sale Kimberly Sørensen Jillian Pfferling Marcus Tremonto London Domenico Raimondo Adam Clay Madalena Horta e Costa, Head of Sale Marcus McDonald Sofia Sayn-Wittgenstein Marta De Roia Lisa Stevenson Ben Williams

+44 20 7318 4052 +1 212 940 1268 +1 212 940 1266 +1 212 940 1265 +1 212 940 1259 +1 212 940 1268 +1 212 940 1268 +44 20 7318 4016 +44 20 7318 4048 +44 20 7318 4019 +44 20 7318 4095 +44 20 7318 4023 +44 20 7318 4096 +44 20 7901 7926 +44 7769 94 7177

Photographs Vanessa Hallett, Worldwide Head, Photographs

+1 212 940 1243

New York Sarah Krueger, Head of Sale Caroline Deck Rachel Peart Marijana Rayl

+1 212 940 1225 +1 212 940 1247 +1 212 940 1246 +1 212 940 1386

Chicago Carol Ehlers

+1 773 230 9192

London Genevieve Janvrin, Head of Photographs, Europe Yuka Yamaji Alexandra Bibby Julia Scott Sophie Busby

+44 20 7318 7996 +44 20 7318 4098 +44 20 7318 4087 +44 20 7901 7940 +44 20 7318 4092

Watches Sam Hines, International Head of Watches

+852 2318 2030

Geneva Aurel Bacs, Senior Consultant Bacs & Russo Livia Russo, Senior Consultant Bacs & Russo Justine Séchaud, Bacs & Russo Alexandre Ghotbi Dr. Nathalie Monbaron Virginie Liatard-Roessli Diana Ortega

+41 22 317 81 85 +41 22 317 81 86 +41 22 317 8188 +41 22 317 8181 +41 22 317 81 83 +41 22 317 81 82 +41 22 317 8187

Hong Kong Amy Chow Jill Chen Joey Luk Tiffany To Angel Ho Zachary Lu

+852 2318 2035 +852 2318 2000 +852 2318 2032 +852 2318 2036 +852 2318 2031 +852 2318 2034

Japan Genki Sakamoto Kaz Fujimoto

+81 3 6273 4818 +81 3 6273 4818

Taiwan Cindy Yen New York Paul Boutros Douglas Escribano Leigh Zagoory London Paul David Maudsley Kate Lacey

+886 963 135 449 +1 212 940 1293 +1 212 940 1382 +1 212 940 1285 +44 20 7901 7916 +44 20 7901 2907

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Specialists and Departments Jewels Hong Kong Terry Chu, Head of Jewellery, Asia Anellie Manolas Sammie Leung New York Nazgol Jahan

+852 2318 2038 +852 2318 2041 +852 2318 2040

+1 212 940 1283

London Lane Clements McLean

+44 20 7318 4032

Exhibitions Edwin Pennicott

+44 20 7901 2909

Arts Partnerships London Isa Tharin New York Lauren Shadford Cecilia Wolfson

+44 20 7318 4024 +1 212 940 1257 +1 212 940 1258

Private Sales Susanna Brockman

+44 20 7318 4041

Proposals London Arianna Webb

+44 20 7901 7941

New York Lauren Zanedis

+1 212 940 1271

Ofce of the Chairman and Chief Executive Ofcer and Chief of Staf Lucinda Newman +44 207 318 4099 Executive Assistant to the Senior Executives Elizabeth Anne Wallace

+1 212 940 1303

Operations Hong Kong Juliana Cheung, Chief Operating Ofcer Client Advisory London Guy Vesey Dawn Zhu Lily Atherton Hanbury Fiona M. McGovern

+852 2318 2020

+44 20 7901 7934 +44 20 7318 4017 +44 20 7318 4071 +44 20 7318 4054

New York Philae Knight Sara Tayeb-Khalifa

+1 212 940 1313 +1 212 940 1383

Communications and Marketing Michael Sherman, Chief Communications and Public Relations Ofcer Katie Carder Jaime Israni, PR Specialist Trish Walsh, Director of Marketing & Events Emma Miller Gelberg, Associate Manager, Marketing and Business Development Charlotte Adlard, Marketing Associate Georgia Trotter, Events Manager

+1 212 940 1384 +44 20 7901 7938 +1 212 940 1398 +1 212 940 1224 +1 212 940 1291 +44 207 901 7905 +44 20 7318 4085

Creative Services Andrea Koronkiewicz, Director of Creative Services Orlann Capazorio, Director of Production London Eve Campbell, Creative Services Manager Moira Gil, Graphic Designer Laurie-Ann Ward, Graphic Designer

+1 212 940 1326 +1 212 940 1281 +44 20 7901 7919 +44 20 7901 7917 +44 20 7901 7918

New York Jef Velazquez, Production Artist Christine Knorr, Graphic Designer James Reeder, Graphic Designer

+1 212 940 1211 +1 212 940 1325 +1 212 940 1296

Sale Information Latin America

Latin American Art Department

Auction & Viewing Location 450 Park Avenue New York 10022

Worldwide Director Henry Allsopp +44 20 7318 4060

Auction 22 November 2016 at 11am

Head of Sale Kaeli Deane +1 212 940 1352

Viewing 18 – 22 November Monday – Saturday 10am – 6pm Sunday 10am – 6pm

Specialist, Miami Valentina Garcia +1 917 583 4983

Sale Designation When sending in written bids or making enquiries please refer to this sale as NY010916 or Latin America. Absentee and Telephone Bids tel +1 212 940 1228 fax +1 212 924 1749 bidsnewyork@phillips.com

Cataloguer Carolina Scarborough +1 212 940 1391 Administrator Isabel Suarez +1 212 940 1227 Photography Jean Bourbon Kent Pell Matt Kroenig

Auctioneers Hugues Joffre - 2028495 August Uribe - 0926461 Sarah Krueger - 1460468 Henry Highley - 2008889 Catalogues Emma Miller Gelberg +1 212 940 1240 catalogues@phillips.com $35/€25/£22 at the gallery Client Accounting Sylvia Leitao +1 212 940 1231 Buyer Accounts Michael Carretta +1 212 940 1232 Seller Accounts Carolina Swan +1 212 940 1253 Client Services 450 Park Avenue +1 212 940 1200

Front cover Diego Rivera, Retrato de Marevna (Portrait of Marevna), 1916, lot 16 Back cover Lygia Pape, Escultura, 1965, lot 11

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450 Park Avenue New York 10022 phillips.com +1 212 940 1200 bidsnewyork@phillips.com Please return this form by fax to +1 212 924 1749 or email it to bidsnewyork@phillips.com at least 24 hours before the sale. Please read carefully the information in the right column and note that it is important that you indicate whether you are applying as an individual or on behalf of a company. Please select the type of bid you wish to make with this form (please select one): Paddle Number

In-person Absentee Bidding Telephone Bidding

• Company purchases: If you are buying under a business entity we require a copy of government-issued identification (such as a resale certificate, corporate bank information or the certificate of incorporation) to verify the status of the company. • Conditions of Sale: All bids are placed and executed, and all lots are sold and purchased, subject to the Conditions of Sale printed in the catalogue. Please read them carefully before placing a bid. Your attention is drawn to Paragraph 4 of the Conditions of Sale.

Please indicate in what capacity you will be bidding (please select one):

As a private individual On behalf of a company

• If you cannot attend the sale, we can execute bids confidentially on your behalf.

Sale Title Title

• Private purchases: Proof of identity in the form of government-issued identification will be required.

Sale Number First Name

Sale Date

Surname Account Number

Company (if applicable) Address

• Phillips charges the successful bidder a commission, or buyer’s premium, on the hammer price of each lot sold. The buyer’s premium is payable by the buyer as part of the total purchase price at the following rates: 25% of the hammer price up to and including $200,000, 20% of the portion of the hammer price above $200,000 up to and including $3,000,000 and 12% of the portion of the hammer price above $3,000,000 on each lot sold.

• “Buy” or unlimited bids will not be accepted. Alternative bids can be placed by using the word “OR” between lot numbers.

City

• For absentee bids, indicate your maximum limit for each lot, excluding the buyer’s premium and any applicable sales or use tax. Your bid will be executed at the lowest price taking into account the reserve and other bidders. On no reserve lots, in the absence of other bids, your bid will be executed at approximately 50% of the low pre-sale estimate or at the amount specified, if less than 50% of the low estimate.

State/Country

Zip Code Phone

Mobile

Email

Fax

• Your bid must be submitted in the currency of the sale and will be rounded down to the nearest amount consistent with the auctioneer’s bidding increments.

Phone (for Phone Bidding only) Phone number to call at the time of sale (for Phone Bidding only) 1.

• If we receive identical bids, the first bid received will take precedence.

2.

Please complete the following section for telephone and absentee bids only Lot Number

Brief Description

In Consecutive Order

US $ Limit* Absentee Bids Only

• Arranging absentee and telephone bids is a free service provided by us to prospective buyers. While we will exercise reasonable care in undertaking such activity, we cannot accept liability for errors relating to execution of your bids except in cases of willful misconduct. Agreement to bid by telephone must be confirmed by you promptly in writing or by fax. Telephone bid lines may be recorded. • Please submit your bids to the Bid Department by fax at +1 212 924 1749 or scan and email to bidsnewyork@phillips. com at least 24 hours before the sale. You will receive confirmation by email within one business day. To reach the Bid Department by phone please call +1 212 940 1228. • Absent prior payment arrangements, please provide a bank reference. Payment can be made by cash (up to $10,000), credit card (up to $100,000), money order, wire transfer, bank check or personal check with identification. Please note that credit cards are subject to a surcharge. • Lots cannot be collected until payment has cleared and all charges have been paid. • By signing this Bid Form, you consent to our use of your personal data, including sensitive personal data, in accordance with Phillips’s Privacy Policy published on our website at www. phillips.com or available on request by emailing dataprotection@phillips.com. We may send you materials about us and our services or other information which we think you may fnd interesting. If you would prefer not to receive such information, please email us at dataprotection@phillips.com.

* Excluding Buyer’s Premium and sales or use taxes

Signature

Date

• Phillips’s premises may be subject to video surveillance and recording. Telephone calls (e.g., telephone bidding) may also be recorded. We may process that information in accordance with our Privacy Policy.

By signing this form, you accept the Conditions of Sale of Phillips as stated in our catalogues and on our website.

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