“It’s the chance that dictates the acquisition. And you’ll’t let it go you by,” says the billionaire real-estate developer and collector Eduardo Costantini of his newest buy. Final week, Costantini, who’s the founding father of Malba (Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires), certainly one of South America’s most necessary non-public museums, turned the brand new proprietor of La Grande Dame (The Cat Girl, 1951), an imposing surrealist sculpture by Leonora Carrington, which was bought at Sotheby’s Trendy Night sale in New York.
With a feline face and human physique, this reverse-sphinx stands at two-meters excessive. It final got here to public sale in 1994, when it bought at Sotheby’s New York for lower than $300,000. For many years it had belonged to the gathering of the notable patron Edward James and was beforehand exhibited at venues such because the Tate Trendy and the Serpentine Gallery in London, the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork in New York, and the Peggy Guggenheim Assortment in Venice.
Costantini gained the work following a five-minute, five-person bidding conflict, secured the lot for $11.3m (with charges). “The piece was estimated between $5m and $7m. I joined the public sale when it was at $6m, however sadly, it escalated in a short time,” he says. “My restrict was $10m and because the bidding approached that spherical quantity, I seen that the public sale was slowing down. I might sense the opposite bidder was faltering.” The Argentine collector performed his remaining card, providing $9.8m. “It appears the opposite bidder didn’t need to go for the spherical quantity. And fortuitously he stopped there.” Early subsequent yr, La Grande Dame will likely be exhibited at Malba.
The work was made in collaboration with sculptor José Horna. That very same night, Costantini additionally acquired La marioneta (Caja de música), a novel 1956 piece by Horna, for $80,000.
Carrington has turn out to be a coveted determine at auctions, particularly because the Italian curator Cecilia Alemani selected certainly one of her works because the inspiration for the central exhibition of the 2022 Venice Biennale, The Milk of Goals.
Costantini has lately turn out to be probably the most prolific patrons of Latin American Artwork. In Could this yr, Costantini purchased Las distracciones de Dagoberto (1945), which set a report for a Carrington work, promoting for $28.4m at Sotheby’s New York. This quantity, nonetheless, doesn’t surpass the $34.9m paid by the Argentine at public sale for Diego y yo (1949) by Frida Kahlo, which stays the most costly Latin American paintings up to now. The small portray, a self-portrait of the enduring Mexican artist with Diego Rivera’s face painted on her brow like a 3rd eye, remained in a personal Texas assortment till 2021, when it modified arms. The earlier proprietor had purchased it for $1.4m.
“It’s true that there’s a powerful deal with Surrealism in the mean time, and these acquisitions naturally convey extra visibility to our assortment. However I insist, the significance of the piece is what guides our path, which is a protracted one. You have to take it step-by-step.”
Malba—which just lately introduced the appointment of the Brazilian curator Rodrigo Moura as its creative director—was based in 2001 with a group of 220 works. In line with Costantini, that quantity now reaches round 700 works, “plus one other 700 from my private assortment, that is about 1,500 in complete”. As he explains: “I see all of it as one. Mentally, I don’t distinguish between them. I view it as a single unit. The identical collector, the identical purchaser, the identical philosophy.”
Among the many highlights at present exhibited on the museum are Abaporu (1928) by Tarsila do Amaral, purchased in 1995 for nearly $1.5m; O impossível (1945) by Maria Martins, bought in 1998 for lower than $100,000; and Kahlo’s Autorretrato con chango y loro (1942), the star of the gathering, which in 1995 price him $3.2m—which set the report worth for the Mexican artist for the subsequent seven years.
Different notable works within the assortment embrace two by Remedios Varo, acquired in 2020 and 2021 (for $3.1m and $6.2m, respectively) and Baile en Tehuantepec (1928) by Diego Rivera, for which Costantini paid $15.7m at Phillips in 2016.
The gathering’s significance is, Constantini says, “mirrored within the steady mortgage requests we obtain from worldwide museums”, such because the Museum of Trendy Artwork in New York (MoMA) or the Pinacoteca de São Paulo. This yr, 5 works—together with Diego y yo—had been featured within the Venice Biennale, curated by Brazilian Adriano Pedrosa, who can also be a member of Malba’s creative committee.
In 2024, Costantini additionally purchased works by Bolivian painter Alejandro Mario Yllanes (1913–1960), one of many first to include indigenous designs into his work, paying $1.9m and $1.1m for 2 of his items. His repertoire additionally expanded with a sculpture by Colombian Rómulo Rozo (1899–1964) for $1.4m and a piece by Mexican painter Nahui Olin (1893–1978), Diego Rivera’s muse, for $317,500. He additionally paid $25,000 every for 2 works by younger Brazilian artist Dalton Paula (1982), whose work is impressed by Afro-Brazilian traditions.
In line with Costantini, these acquisitions mirror meticulous analysis and a method encompassing auctions, galleries, non-public collections, and direct collaboration with artists and their heirs. Requested of his ambitions for the gathering he says: “I don’t promote my works. The aim is to have the very best assortment of Latin American artwork on this planet.”