- Associated Press - Tuesday, March 21, 2017

NEW YORK (AP) - A painting that Sotheby’s hails as one of the most important pieces by Diego Rivera to go to auction in recent years will headline its Latin American art sale in May, the auction house said.

“Portrait of Senorita Matilde Palou” (1951) depicts Matilde Palou, a Chilean actress and singer who gained fame in Mexican cinema. The oil on canvas was last seen in public in 1988, when Sotheby’s sold it for $203,000. On Wednesday, it will go on view in its galleries in Los Angeles as a prelude to the May 25 auction in New York.

“I saw Diego Rivera’s splendid portrait of Senorita Matilde Palou for the first time about 30 years ago … and again, just a few weeks ago. I was struck once again by her majestic beauty,” Axel Stein, Sotheby’s head of Latin American art, said in an email to The Associated Press. “The painting is a wonderful example of the artist at the height of his powers and a glorious symbol of Mexican national pride. It is undoubtedly one of the most important works by the artist to appear at auction in recent memory.”

The estimate for the 80 x 48 1/8 inches (203 x 122.3 cm) oil on canvas is $2 million to $3 million. The auction record for Rivera is $3,082,500, set in 1995 with the painting “Baile en Tehuantepec” (1928) also at Sotheby’s.

“Portrait of Senorita Matilde Palou” was commissioned to the artist in 1950 by Osceola Heard Davenport, a wealthy Rio Grande Valley widow of an oilman whose heirs sold it through the auction house almost three decades ago.

In the painting, Palou is standing, reclining against what looks like a fireplace. She wears a resplendent dress covered in Mexican imagery, including flags, a coat of arms and Mexican jewelry.

For this painting Rivera made a preparatory drawing in pencil and an oil sketch on canvas. The drawing, titled “Chiapaneca” and dedicated “To Chapo Linda. Diego Rivera 51,” shows the model in the same position, but with one more bracelet on her arm and a cigarette in her right hand.

Matilde Palou was best known for films such as Luis Bunuel’s “Susana,” made the same year as Rivera’s painting; 1949’s “El dolor de los hijos,” directed by Miguel Zacarías; and 1957’s “La culta dama,” directed by Rogelio A. González. Married to prominent Mexican actor Miguel Angel Ferriz, she also worked in New York doing voiceovers for MGM.

___

Sigal Ratner-Arias on Twitter: https://twitter.com/sigalratner

___

Online:

www.sothebys.com

Copyright © 2024 The Washington Times, LLC.

Please read our comment policy before commenting.

Click to Read More and View Comments

Click to Hide