Belkis Ayón (1967-1999)
Belkis Ayón (1967-1999)
Belkis Ayón (1967-1999)
Belkis Ayón (1967-1999)
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Please note this lot will be moved to Christie’s F… Read more OUTSIDE CUBA INSIDE: PROPERTY FROM THE FARBER COLLECTION OF CONTEMPORARY CUBAN ART
Belkis Ayón (1967-1999)

Desobediencia

Details
Belkis Ayón (1967-1999)
Desobediencia
signed, dated, titled, and numbered, 'Belkis Ayón/98, Desobediencia, 1/4' (lower edge)
collograph on paper
99 3/4 x 77 5/8 in. (253.4 x 197.2 cm.) overall dimensions, eight sheets
Executed in 1998.
Edition one of four.
Provenance
Couturier Gallery, Los Angeles.
Acquired from the above by the present owner.
Literature
D. Peña Edmond, Colagrafía a cinco voces, Havana, Universidad de la Habana, Facultad de Artes y Letras, 21 June 2007.
C. Vives, D. Mateo and L. Menéndez, Belkis Ayón: Nkame, Catalogue Raisonné, Turner, 2010, pp. 23 and 231 no. 98.12.
J. Dorfman, "Southern Exposure," Art & Antiques, November 2011, pp. 84.
Exhibited
Los Angeles, Couturier Gallery, Desasosiego/Restlessness: Belkis Ayón, 1998.
London, Barbican Centre, ¡Cuba Presente! Trabajando pa'l inglé, 1999 (another edition illustrated).
Madrid, Centro Cultural del Conde Duque, Salas Pedro de Ribera y Juan de Villanueva, Arte cubano, más allá del papel, 1999 (another edition illustrated).
Havana, Séptima Bienal de La Habana, Galería Habana, Siempre vuelvo. Colografías de Belkis Ayón. Exposicion homenaje, 2000 (another edition illustrated).
Havana, Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes, Colografías y matrices de de Belkis Ayón. Imágenes desde el silencio, 2001 (another edition illustrated).
Havana, Convento de San Francisco de Asis, Nkame. Belkis Ayón (1967 - 1999), 2009 (another edition illustrated).
Special notice
Please note this lot will be moved to Christie’s Fine Art Storage Services (CFASS in Red Hook, Brooklyn) at 5pm on the last day of the sale. Lots may not be collected during the day of their move to Christie’s Fine Art Storage Services. Please consult the Lot Collection Notice for collection information. This sheet is available from the Bidder Registration staff, Purchaser Payments or the Packing Desk and will be sent with your invoice.

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Lot Essay

“I aspire above all to give my vision, my points of view as observer, presenting in a synthesized form the aesthetic, plastic, and poetic aspects I discovered in Abakuá,” Ayón once declared, “persistently relating them to the nature of man, with vivid personalities, with feeling which sometimes grips us, feelings we don’t know how to define, with these fugitive emotions…with the spiritual” (“Belkis Ayón: Statements by and About the Deceased Artist,” Callaloo 37, no. 4, 2014, p. 769). The mythology of Abakúa, the secret all-male, Afro-Cuban fraternity, provided a creative wellspring for Ayón across a short but prodigious career. She studied at Havana’s Instituto Superior de Arte and joined the faculty following her graduation in 1991; she later led the school’s department of printmaking. Ayón represented Cuba at the Venice Biennale in 1993, famously riding her bicycle twenty miles to the airport; Nkame: A Retrospective of Cuban Printmaker Belkis Ayón opened at the Fowler Museum at UCLA in 2016 and has traveled worldwide, most recently to the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia earlier this year.

“It is curious that in almost all her works Belkis herself served as model for the representation of Sikán,” Orlando Hernández has observed. “The shape of her body, her head, her face, her eyes constantly appear in her prints replac­ing the body, the head, the face, and the eyes of Sikán... In Belkis’s works, Sikán became a woman once again, a black Cuban woman with feel­ings, ideas, opinions. Belkis’s presence as Sikán allows the ancient mythical situation constantly reenacted in the rituals to become human and contemporary, thus making visible the real and daily content that the mechanics of every ritual tend to hide or forget” (“Belkis Ayón Manso,” Nkame: A retrospective of Cuban printmaker Belkis Ayón, exh. cat., El Museo del Barrio, New York, 2017, p. 14). Sikán plays a central role in the origin myth of Abakúa. A princess of the Efut nation, Sikán unwittingly trapped a fish whose embodied voice belonged to the supreme deity and ancestor whose sacred knowledge was forbidden to women; she divulged this secret to her lover, a member of a rival tribe, in a decision that ultimately condemned her to death.

Desobediencia suggestively returns us to origins of Abakúa, revisiting the scene of betrayal and its corollary themes of knowledge, power, and belonging. The figures surround the swirling eddy at the work’s center, their bodies patterned with fish scales and leopard print—a nod to West African “leopard societies” and the sacred fish—and rendered in white, black, and infinite shades of gray. A large-scale collagraph, made by printing materials collaged onto cardboard, Desobediencia has the grandeur of an altarpiece, a form of feminist homage to the legend and sacrifice of Sikán—and, implicitly, to Ayón herself. “The image of Sikán is evident in all these works,” Ayón remarked, “because she, like me, lived and lives through me in restlessness, looking insistently for a way out” (op. cit., p. 769).

Abby McEwen, Assistant Professor, University of Maryland, College Park

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