Search the whole artnet database
This artwork, Cabeza sobre fondo azul by Rufino Tamayo, is currently for sale at MLA Gallery.
Find comprehensive details on this artwork below, contact the gallery from this page, or browse more artworks by Rufino Tamayo in artnet Galleries.

 More from this Artist

 Previous

Next  
 

Rufino Tamayo, Cabeza sobre fondo azul
 
 Print this Page
Share |
 
TITLE:  Cabeza sobre fondo azul
ARTIST:  Rufino Tamayo (Mexican, 1899–1991)
WORK DATE:  1984
CATEGORY:  Prints and Multiples
MATERIALS:  This is a mixografia, on thick hand-made paper. (plus framing)
EDITION/SET OF:  100
SIZE:  h: 36.2 x w: 27.2 in / h: 91.9 x w: 69.1 cm
STYLE:  Contemporary
PRICE*:  Very reasonable. MLA Gallery offers competitive pricing, well below retail, on all of our inventory. Please inquire.
  (Convert prices to your currency with our Currency Converter)
GALLERY:  MLA Gallery  323-222-3400  Send Email
DESCRIPTION:  This print is in excellent condition, and it is the opinion of this gallery that this represents one of Tamayo's finest mixografias of his career. It was done on very thick, hand-made paper, and is deeply embossed. The lines are elegant, and profound, and the colors are rich, earthy, and sublime. This print is very sought after, and quite difficult to find. This lovely mixografia was printed, and published by Taller Grafica Mexicana, which is now Remba.

This print is beautifully framed, with approximately $3,500 in the framing. It is done with Roma moulding (hand crafted Italian wood moulding), silk matting, and hardwood filets. All of the Tamayo printwork from MLA Gallery comes with an unconditional guarantee of authenticity, on the gallery letterhead, and a lifetime trade in policy.

Luis and Lea Remba first approached Tamayo with the idea of making prints in 1973. Initially uninterested, Tamayo said that he would venture into printmaking only if he felt confident he could produce editions that possessed the same kinds of volume, textures and depth as his paintings. Luis Remba responded to Tamayo’s challenge by developing a printing method which, eventually, he and Tamayo would together name “Mixografia.” As Remba explains, “I set to work and found a way to print with texture. The method allowed the artist to create a collage or maquette out of various materials, such as charred wood, rope, cotton and other natural substances, which we would then cast in copper as a printing plate.” Remba continues, “the key to the Mixografia process came when we started making our own paper for the editions, which allowed the ink to be absorbed and created a fresco-like quality to the finished works.”Tamayo found the results extremely pleasing, and felt that it captured the kind of textured luminosity of his paintings. Consequently, the artist embarked with the Rembas on a working relationship which spanned a seventeen-year period, resulting in eighty editions, which many feel is the best printwork of Tamayo's career. This print is the last mixografia, of Tamayo's career.

Excellent prints by Tamayo represent a blue chip investment. They will more than likely appreciate dramatically over time. One of Tamayo's paintings entitled "Trovador", which was done in 1945, recently set a record for the highest price ever paid at auction, for a Latin American painting, at the Christies sale on May 28th, 2008, when it sold for $7,209.000.00.

ONLINE CATALOGUE(S):  Inventory Catalogue I. : Contemporary Fine Art
 
*Prices subject to change

 Get email alerts about this artist!
artnet—The Art World Online. ©2013 Artnet Worldwide Corporation. All rights reserved. artnet® is a registered trademark of Artnet Worldwide Corporation, New York, NY, USA.