拍品专文
This lot is sold with a certificate of authenticity signed by the artist.
The still life provides Botero with a chance to explore a theme in which style is more important than the subject-matter itself. The simplest form in nature is the orange, yet it is also the most difficult to paint. An orange by Van Gogh is different from one by Picasso or by Cézanne; Botero’s orange conveys the burden of his aesthetic convictions and his meditations on art, which shape his uniquely distinctive style. Botero’s work in [the still life] genre reflects his dictum that 'an artist’s style should be wholly recognizable even in the simplest figures.’
—Lina Botero, Fernando Botero: A Celebration
The still life provides Botero with a chance to explore a theme in which style is more important than the subject-matter itself. The simplest form in nature is the orange, yet it is also the most difficult to paint. An orange by Van Gogh is different from one by Picasso or by Cézanne; Botero’s orange conveys the burden of his aesthetic convictions and his meditations on art, which shape his uniquely distinctive style. Botero’s work in [the still life] genre reflects his dictum that 'an artist’s style should be wholly recognizable even in the simplest figures.’
—Lina Botero, Fernando Botero: A Celebration