JOSÉ VILLEGAS Y CORDERO (SEVILLE 1848-1921 MADRID)
JOSÉ VILLEGAS Y CORDERO (SEVILLE 1848-1921 MADRID)
JOSÉ VILLEGAS Y CORDERO (SEVILLE 1848-1921 MADRID)
2 More
This lot is offered without reserve.
JOSÉ VILLEGAS Y CORDERO (SEVILLE 1848-1921 MADRID)

The Andalusian Fates

Details
JOSÉ VILLEGAS Y CORDERO (SEVILLE 1848-1921 MADRID)
The Andalusian Fates
signed 'Villegas' (lower right)
oil on canvas
61 5/8 x 56 3/4 in. (156.4 x 144.2 cm.)
Painted circa 1910-13.
Provenance
with Guerrico & Williams, Buenos Aires.
Private collection, Buenos Aires, by 1919.
Joey Tanenbaum (d. 2022) and Toby Tanenbaum, Toronto; Sotheby's, New York, 7 May 1998, lot 270, where acquired by the present owner.
Literature
S. y J. Alvarez Quintero, Homenaje a Villegas, Madrid, 1919, p. 31, fig. XLV, illustrated with an engraving in an earlier state.
Franmarco, 'Hablando con Don José Villegas,' El Noticiero Sevillano, Seville, 1 May 1913, pp. 1-2, illustrated in an earlier state.
Exhibited
Seville, Museo de Bellas Artes and Córdoba, Sala de Exposiciones Museísticas CajaSur, José Villegas Cordero (1844-1921), 22 February-6 May 2001, no. 300.
Special Notice
This lot is offered without reserve.

Brought to you by

Jonquil O’Reilly
Jonquil O’Reilly Vice President, Specialist, Head of Sale

Lot Essay

José Villegas y Cordero was born in Seville in the Andalusian region of Spain in 1848. Villegas sold his first painting at the age of twelve and with time became one of Spain's most highly decorated and collected artists. A pupil of José Maria Romero, Villegas went on to study at the School of Fine Arts in Seville and later, in the studio of Madrazo in Madrid. His earliest mature paintings were of Orientalist subjects that drew their inspiration from both the work of Fortuny and a trip to Morocco that Villegas had taken in 1867. Italy was to be Villegas's early artistic home, and the artist lived in Rome and Venice from 1868 to 1901, when he returned to Spain to assume the position of Director of the Prado Museum. During the first years of his stay in Madrid he became recognized as a leader in the social and intellectual life of the capital and Spanish subject matter, like that of the present work, began to appear in his oeuvre with increasing frequency.

The present work depicts three vibrantly dressed young women in the guise of the three fates – Clotho, Lachesis and Atropos – who spin, measure, and cut the strands of fate which represent human life in Greek Mythology. The three figures gaze directly out of the picture plane, their sight lines directed toward the viewer. This knowing returned gaze from the three fates is among the most striking aspects of the work – the three women seem to be sizing up the fate of the viewer, the figures in red and blue leaning conspiratorially toward one another as if discussing what they know that we cannot. Originally, the composition depicted the women standing on a balcony overlooking Seville, however the artist’s change to the more ambiguous floral setting makes the subject matter more generalized in nature but by extension more personally resonant to each viewer’s experience of the work. Villegas reworked the background of the composition at least twice and made some minor changes within the figures as well.

More from Remastered: Old Masters from the Collection of J.E. Safra - Selling Without Reserve

View All
View All