11.22.2013
A triangulated aluminum sculpture by Brazilian artist Lygia Clark that sold for USD 1.8 million at Phillips' Latin American auction, capped a week of regional art sales in New York in which Brazilian works commanded the top prices.
Lygia Clark's 1960 "Bicho Invertebrado" was the top item in the evening auction on Thursday, which brought in USD 6 million.
"We were thrilled by the strong response of collectors," said Henry Allsopp, Phillips' worldwide director of Latin American art, said of the auction, in which artists from Venezuela, Argentina, Chile, Mexico, Puerto Rico, Cuba and Colombia were also represented.
The Clark sculpture, which consists of six hinged triangles, is designed to be manipulated by viewers to create a variety of configurations. The artist, who died in 1988, said the pieces were made to interplay with each other like "a living organism, essentially an active work."
Last May an abstract Clark sculpture sold in New York for USD 2.2 million, the highest price at auction for a work by a Brazilian artist.
All of the top 10 lots at the Phillips auction were contemporary Brazilian pieces, including Nelson Leirner's "Homenagem a Fontana I", which sold for USD 359,000, a record for the artist.
Works sold at Christie's on Tuesday set records for two living Brazilian artists, Abraham Palatnik and Tomie Ohtake.
At Sotheby's auction on Wednesday, Brazilian artist Sergio Camargo's sculpture "Untitled (Relief No. 21/52)" fetched USD 2.1 million, setting a record for the artist.
"There is a new impetus in the Brazilian collecting world. There is more knowledge, there are more exhibitions, they have a strong local market," Sotheby's Latin American art chief Axel Stein said after the sale.
Tags: auction, lygiaclark, bicho, brazilianart, newyork, ny, phillips, latinamericanart, nelsonleirner, christies, abrahampalatnik, tomieohtake, clark, leirner, palatnik, ohtake, sergiocamargo, camargo, sothebys, artmarket, collection, sales.