Painting Found In Trash Could Fetch $1M
A painting stolen 20 years ago was found lying in trash along a street, and now it could fetch up to $1 million at auction.
Elizabeth Gibson didn't know anything about the brightly colored abstract work she spotted on her morning walk four years ago on Manhattan's Upper West Side. Sotheby's auction house will be selling the work next month for the now-widowed original owner.
"I would say it was an appointment with destiny," Gibson said in a telephone interview Tuesday. "I just knew it meant something. ... It was extremely powerful, and even though I didn't understand it. I knew it had power."
It turned out that it was a 1970 painting titled "Tres Personajes" (Three People) by Mexican artist Rufino Tamayo, whose work has soared in value in recent years.
A Houston couple whose names were not disclosed purchased the work - an oil on canvas with marble dust and sand worked into the paint - in 1977 at Sotheby's. It was stolen in 1987 from a warehouse where they had placed it while moving.
The couple reported the theft to Houston and federal authorities. Information on the missing painting also was posted on the databases of the International Foundation for Art Research and the Art Loss Register. But no credible leads had turned up.
August Uribe, Sotheby's senior vice president of Impressionist and modern art, said in an interview Tuesday that the husband paid $55,000 for it as a gift for his wife. He has since died and she is putting it up for sale.
Sotheby's said it could bring up to $1 million when it is sold at its Latin American Art auction on Nov. 20. Gibson will receive the $15,000 reward the couple put up when it was stolen, plus an undisclosed percentage of the sale of the painting.
Gibson said she learned of the work's worth when her research led her to the Web site of "Antiques Roadshow FYI," a companion program to the PBS show "Antiques Roadshow."
Uribe had featured the painting on "Antiques Roadshow FYI's" Missing Materpieces segment.
Sotheby's says "Tres Personajes" is an important work that represents the artist's mature period.
Tamayo was born in 1899 in the Mexican state of Oaxaca and studied at Mexico's School of Fine Arts. His early work had similarities to that of famous Mexican muralists such as Diego Rivera. His later style is more individual, featuring the vivid colors and expressions of Oaxaca and the influence of pre-Columbian art.
By the time he died in 1991, Tamayo was famous worldwide with numerous prizes to his credit and exhibitions in the United States, South America, Europe and Russia.
A Tamayo retrospective starts Friday at the Museo Tamayo Arte Contemporaneo in Mexico City.