Frida Kahlo’s “El sueño (La cama)” — in English, “The Dream (The Bed)” — is inflicting a stir amongst artwork historians as its estimated $40 million to $60 million price ticket would make it the costliest work by any feminine or Latin American artist when it goes to public sale later this month.
Sotheby’s public sale home will put the portray up on the market on Nov. 20 in New York after exhibiting it in London, Abu Dhabi, Hong Kong and Paris.
“This is a moment of a lot of speculation,” mentioned Mexican artwork historian Helena Chávez Mac Gregor, a researcher at UNAM’s Institute of Aesthetic Analysis and creator of “El listón y la bomba. El arte de Frida Kahlo.” (The ribbon and the bomb. The artwork of Frida Kahlo).
In Mexico, Kahlo’s work is protected by a declaration of creative monument, that means items inside the nation can’t be bought or destroyed. Nonetheless, works from non-public collections overseas — just like the portray in query, whose proprietor stays unrevealed — are legally eligible for worldwide sale.
“The system of declaring Mexican modern artistic heritage is very anomalous,” mentioned Mexican curator Cuauhtémoc Medina, an artwork historian and specialist in up to date artwork.
Judas in mattress
“El sueño (La cama)” was created in 1940 following Kahlo’s journey to Paris, the place she got here into contact with the surrealists.
Opposite to up to date perception, the cranium on the mattress’s cover just isn’t a Day of the Lifeless skeleton, however a Judas — a home made cardboard determine. Historically lit with gunpowder throughout Easter, this effigy symbolizes purification and the triumph of excellent over evil, representing Judas Iscariot who betrayed Jesus.
Within the portray, the skeleton is detailed with firecrackers, flowers on its ribs and a smiling grimace — a element impressed by a cardboard skeleton Kahlo really saved within the cover of her personal mattress.
Kahlo “spent a lot of time in bed waiting for death,” mentioned Chávez Mac Gregor. “She had a very complex life because of all the illnesses and physical challenges with which she lived.”
Frida and surrealism
Though Kahlo’s portray is being auctioned alongside works by surrealists like Salvador Dalí, René Magritte, Max Ernst and Dorothea Tanning, she didn’t think about herself a member of the motion, regardless of having met its founder, André Breton, in Mexico and had an exhibition organized by him in Paris in 1939.
“Breton was fascinated by Frida’s work, because he saw that surrealist spirit there,” mentioned Chávez Mac Gregor.
Kahlo, a dedicated communist, thought-about surrealism — a motion proposing a revolution of consciousness — to be bourgeois. As Chávez Mac Gregor famous, “Frida always had a critical distance from that.”
Regardless of this, specialists have discovered parts of surrealism in Kahlo’s work associated to the dreamlike, to an internal world and to a revolutionary and sexual freedom — an idea seen in a mattress suspended within the sky with Kahlo sleeping amongst a vine.
‘Crazy-priced purchases’
“El sueño (La cama)” was final exhibited within the Nineties, and after the public sale, it may disappear from public view as soon as once more, a destiny shared by many work acquired for giant sums at public sale.
There are exceptions, together with “Diego y yo” ( “Diego and I”), which set Kahlo’s document sale worth when it bought for $34.9 million in 2021.
The portray, depicting the artist and her husband muralist Diego Rivera, was acquired by Argentine enterprise proprietor Eduardo Costantini after which lent to the Museum of Latin American Artwork of Buenos Aires (Malba) the place it stays on exhibit.
Medina, the artwork historian, regretted that the “crazy-priced” purchases have decreased artwork to a mere financial worth.
He lamented that when funds buy artwork as mere investments — like shopping for shares in a public firm — the works are sometimes relegated to tax-free zones to keep away from prices. Their destiny, he mentioned, “may be worse; they may end up in a refrigerator at Frankfurt airport for decades to come.”
A feminine artist
The present sale document for a piece by a feminine artist is held by Georgia O’Keeffe’s “Jimson Weed/White Flower No. 1,” which fetched $44.4 million at Sotheby’s in 2014.
Nonetheless, the public sale market nonetheless displays a profound disparity as no feminine artist has but exceeded the utmost sale worth of a male artist. The present benchmark is “Salvator Mundi,” attributed to Leonardo da Vinci, which was auctioned by Christie’s for $450.3 million in 2017.
