Lot

33

Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century.

In Millésime 25 · 20th anniversary of La Suite Su...

This auction is live! You need to be registered and approved to bid at this auction.
You have been outbid. For the best chance of winning, increase your maximum bid.
Your bid or registration is pending approval with the auctioneer. Please check your email account for more details.
Unfortunately, your registration has been declined by the auctioneer. You can contact the auctioneer on +34 93 3001477 for more information.
You are the current highest bidder! To be sure to win, log in for the live auction broadcast on or increase your max bid.
Leave a bid now! Your registration has been successful.
Sorry, bidding has ended on this item. We have thousands of new lots everyday, start a new search.
Bidding on this auction has not started. Please register now so you are approved to bid when auction starts.
1/19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 1 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 2 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 3 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 4 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 5 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 6 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 7 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 8 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 9 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 10 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 11 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 12 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 13 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 14 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 15 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 16 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 17 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 18 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 19 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 1 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 2 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 3 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 4 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 5 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 6 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 7 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 8 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 9 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 10 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 11 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 12 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 13 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 14 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 15 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 16 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 17 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 18 of 19
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century. - Image 19 of 19
Interested in the price of this lot?
Subscribe to the price guide
Barcelona
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century."Genealogy of the fourteen Inca kings and the conqueror Francisco Pizarro"Fifteen oil paintings on canvas. 84 x 63 cm each. Complete series comprising the fourteen Inca Emperors: Mancco Ccapac, Sinchi Rocca, Lloqque Yupanqui, Maita Ccapac, Ccapac Yupanqui, Inca Rocca Yahuar- Huaccac, Viracocha, Pachacutec, Inca Yupanqui, Tupac-Yupanqui, Huaina Ccapac, Huascar-Inca and Atahuallpa, and the portrait of Francisco Pizarro.It is the only complete collection of the fourteen emperors plus Pizarro, preserved in private hands. The paintings are dated to the 18th century through two pigment analyses, a Scanning Electron Microscopy SEM-EDX carried out by the Centre de Restauraciò de Béns Mobles de Catalunya of the Generalitat de Catalunya, Departament de Cultura, dated 11 February 2022 and an X-Ray Fluorescence Spectrometry (EDXRF) applied to the study of the pictorial technique, carried out by Rafael Romero Asenjo of ICONO, Madrid, in September 2021, as well as a complete study of infrared photography, which are attached.An important collection which comprises all of the 14 Inca sovereigns. It begins with the founder of Cuzco, Mancco Ccapac, and goes through to the last of the emperors, Atahualpa and ends with a portrait of Francisco Pizarro. This is a chronological depiction of the portraits of those who governed the Inca Empire before the Spanish Conquest.They are depicted as dressed in the uncu, an exquisitely woven tunic, the mascaipacha (symbol of power as governor of Cusco and Tahuantinsuyo) and a version of the llautu, the traditional royal headdress, complete with red forehead fringe.The geometric textile patterns in all the paintings are reminiscent of tocapu designs on traditional Inca noble clothing, signifying rank and status.The imperial attire is completed with the gold topayauiri or sceptre, topped with a type of plume as a continuation in an axe shape on one side and an awl on the other.Francisco Pizarro is shown in his European armour.The iconic genealogy if the Incas is associated with an engraving made by the clergyman Alonso de la Cueva Ponce de León (1684-1754) in 1725, approximately.This series of genealogies was at its peak after Independence, due to the desire of the indigenous elites in Cuzco to return to their position.The Denver Museum has a series of sixteen portraits in its collection which reflect our fifteen, with an additional portrait of Mama Occollo, the principal wife of the Inca Manco Cápac, both founding heroes of the Inca Empire. As the Denver Museum notes in its index cards on these portraits: This series of genealogies that show the former governors of the Inca Empire "is not only a family tree but a political tool. Since proof of aristocratic Inca blood entitled people to special privileges and freed them from paying taxes in the Spanish Colonial period, paintings were used to document and assert this heritage."(https://www.denverartmuseum.org/en/object/1977.45.1)As stated in the Cervantes Institute’s biography of the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega:"According to the traditional account determined by the Inca Garcilaso in his Royal Commentaries of Peru, the founding fathers Manco Cápac and Mama Ocllo, were born in the waters of Lake Titicaca, and founded the city of Cuzco, the centre of Inca development, in the place revealed by the sun god (Inti) after a pilgrimage that began in the south of the Sacred Valley of the Incas. Another version of the origin myth, collected in the 16th century by Juan de Betanzos (Narrative of the Incas, 1551), attributes it to the four Ayar brothers and their respective partners (https://www.cervantesvirtual.com/portales/inca_garcilaso_de_la_vega/autor_cronologia/)There are differences in the dates attributed to the different Inca kingdoms.Taking the chronology published in the Cervantes Institute’s website as a base, which is taken from Inca Garcilaso de la Vega (Cuzco, Governorate of New Castile, 1539 – Cordoba, 1616) the 14 incas and their periods of governance, all represented in these genealogical portraits, were: From the period 1200-1438, before the Inca state was established, was the founder I-Mancco Ccapac (1200-1230) and those who succeded him, II-Sinchi Rocca (1230-1260) III-Lloqque Yupanqui (1260-1290), IV-Maita Ccapac (1290-1320), V-Ccapac Yupanqui (1320-1350), VI- Inca Rocca (1350-1380), VII- Yahuar- Huaccac (1380-1400), VIII-Viracocha (1400-1438), IX- Pachacutec, (1438-1471) marked the beginning of the Historical Inca Empire with the Kingdom of the Inca Pachacutec, conqueror of the Chanca states. X- Inca Yupanqui (Modern historians have removed his reign from the official list of Inca rulers). XI- Tupac-Yupanqui, XII- Huaina Ccapac (1481-1523) on his death, the Inca Empire was divided between his two sons, Huascar-Inca (1523-1532), Sovereign of the northern region, and Atahualpa (1532-1533), Inca of the southern territories. The period from 1528-1532 saw a civil war between Huascar and Atahualpa over control of the Inca Empire, which ended in August 1532 in Atahualpa’s definitive victory over Huascar in the Battle of Cotabamba. Atahualpa was crowned Inca in Cajamarca. In 1533, the trial and execution of Atahualpa took place. Francisco Pizarro conquered Peru in 1534 and was governor of Peru / New Castile from 1534 to 1540. The Inca Empire passed into Spanish hands, although Tupac Hualpa (1533), Manco Inca (1533-1536) and Paullu Inca (1537-1549) reigned nominally and were crowned by the conquistadors. Examples of this genealogy in individual portraits that are similar to these, as well as those already mentioned in the Denver Museum can be found in:- Brooklyn Museum , has a collection of 14 Portraits of Inca Kings, probably mid-18th century.  Oil on canvas (60 x 55.2cm- Lilly Library, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana.- The individual portrait of Atahuallpa is kept at the Ethnological Museum of Berlin.As well as these series of genealogies in sets of individual portraits, genealogies were also painted in one sole picture in which, depending on the period in which they were executed, the series of governors of the Inca Empire previous to the Spanish conquest was followed chronologically by portraits of the Spanish monarchs.There are magnificent examples of this type of painting, such as those kept in:- Lima Cathedral Museum, dated circa 1725.- The Pedro de Osma Museum in Lima, dating from the late 18th century / early 19th century.- The Carmen de Maipu Museum in Chile, which describes the intention of these types of pictures in the painting’s index card: “the inclusion of the Spanish monarchs responds to the necessity for uniting power, as a strategy of legitimisation and control in colonial society, given that, through these portraits the Spanish monarchs would assimilate the power and the deity that the Inca represented. And, on the contrary, the Incas were considered to be the equals of Spanish royalty, in that way being accepted and acknowledged in their role as former heads of state. The social function of these pictures varied depending on how the historical and political facts were presented.”- The Lima Museum of Art, has an interesting set mounted as a screen, described in their catalogue in this way: “This emblematic piece condenses different stages of art in Peru, it evokes the pre-Colombian past in the shape of a genealogy of the Incas, a theme which came up in the ...Provenance: - Private collection, Florence. - Private collection, Portugal.- Private collection, Spain.This lot comes from import, therefore, it has a guaranteed export permit. For buyers from outside the European Union, it will be exempt from estate taxes.
Viceregal School. Peru. 18th century."Genealogy of the fourteen Inca kings and the conqueror Francisco Pizarro"Fifteen oil paintings on canvas. 84 x 63 cm each. Complete series comprising the fourteen Inca Emperors: Mancco Ccapac, Sinchi Rocca, Lloqque Yupanqui, Maita Ccapac, Ccapac Yupanqui, Inca Rocca Yahuar- Huaccac, Viracocha, Pachacutec, Inca Yupanqui, Tupac-Yupanqui, Huaina Ccapac, Huascar-Inca and Atahuallpa, and the portrait of Francisco Pizarro.It is the only complete collection of the fourteen emperors plus Pizarro, preserved in private hands. The paintings are dated to the 18th century through two pigment analyses, a Scanning Electron Microscopy SEM-EDX carried out by the Centre de Restauraciò de Béns Mobles de Catalunya of the Generalitat de Catalunya, Departament de Cultura, dated 11 February 2022 and an X-Ray Fluorescence Spectrometry (EDXRF) applied to the study of the pictorial technique, carried out by Rafael Romero Asenjo of ICONO, Madrid, in September 2021, as well as a complete study of infrared photography, which are attached.An important collection which comprises all of the 14 Inca sovereigns. It begins with the founder of Cuzco, Mancco Ccapac, and goes through to the last of the emperors, Atahualpa and ends with a portrait of Francisco Pizarro. This is a chronological depiction of the portraits of those who governed the Inca Empire before the Spanish Conquest.They are depicted as dressed in the uncu, an exquisitely woven tunic, the mascaipacha (symbol of power as governor of Cusco and Tahuantinsuyo) and a version of the llautu, the traditional royal headdress, complete with red forehead fringe.The geometric textile patterns in all the paintings are reminiscent of tocapu designs on traditional Inca noble clothing, signifying rank and status.The imperial attire is completed with the gold topayauiri or sceptre, topped with a type of plume as a continuation in an axe shape on one side and an awl on the other.Francisco Pizarro is shown in his European armour.The iconic genealogy if the Incas is associated with an engraving made by the clergyman Alonso de la Cueva Ponce de León (1684-1754) in 1725, approximately.This series of genealogies was at its peak after Independence, due to the desire of the indigenous elites in Cuzco to return to their position.The Denver Museum has a series of sixteen portraits in its collection which reflect our fifteen, with an additional portrait of Mama Occollo, the principal wife of the Inca Manco Cápac, both founding heroes of the Inca Empire. As the Denver Museum notes in its index cards on these portraits: This series of genealogies that show the former governors of the Inca Empire "is not only a family tree but a political tool. Since proof of aristocratic Inca blood entitled people to special privileges and freed them from paying taxes in the Spanish Colonial period, paintings were used to document and assert this heritage."(https://www.denverartmuseum.org/en/object/1977.45.1)As stated in the Cervantes Institute’s biography of the Inca Garcilaso de la Vega:"According to the traditional account determined by the Inca Garcilaso in his Royal Commentaries of Peru, the founding fathers Manco Cápac and Mama Ocllo, were born in the waters of Lake Titicaca, and founded the city of Cuzco, the centre of Inca development, in the place revealed by the sun god (Inti) after a pilgrimage that began in the south of the Sacred Valley of the Incas. Another version of the origin myth, collected in the 16th century by Juan de Betanzos (Narrative of the Incas, 1551), attributes it to the four Ayar brothers and their respective partners (https://www.cervantesvirtual.com/portales/inca_garcilaso_de_la_vega/autor_cronologia/)There are differences in the dates attributed to the different Inca kingdoms.Taking the chronology published in the Cervantes Institute’s website as a base, which is taken from Inca Garcilaso de la Vega (Cuzco, Governorate of New Castile, 1539 – Cordoba, 1616) the 14 incas and their periods of governance, all represented in these genealogical portraits, were: From the period 1200-1438, before the Inca state was established, was the founder I-Mancco Ccapac (1200-1230) and those who succeded him, II-Sinchi Rocca (1230-1260) III-Lloqque Yupanqui (1260-1290), IV-Maita Ccapac (1290-1320), V-Ccapac Yupanqui (1320-1350), VI- Inca Rocca (1350-1380), VII- Yahuar- Huaccac (1380-1400), VIII-Viracocha (1400-1438), IX- Pachacutec, (1438-1471) marked the beginning of the Historical Inca Empire with the Kingdom of the Inca Pachacutec, conqueror of the Chanca states. X- Inca Yupanqui (Modern historians have removed his reign from the official list of Inca rulers). XI- Tupac-Yupanqui, XII- Huaina Ccapac (1481-1523) on his death, the Inca Empire was divided between his two sons, Huascar-Inca (1523-1532), Sovereign of the northern region, and Atahualpa (1532-1533), Inca of the southern territories. The period from 1528-1532 saw a civil war between Huascar and Atahualpa over control of the Inca Empire, which ended in August 1532 in Atahualpa’s definitive victory over Huascar in the Battle of Cotabamba. Atahualpa was crowned Inca in Cajamarca. In 1533, the trial and execution of Atahualpa took place. Francisco Pizarro conquered Peru in 1534 and was governor of Peru / New Castile from 1534 to 1540. The Inca Empire passed into Spanish hands, although Tupac Hualpa (1533), Manco Inca (1533-1536) and Paullu Inca (1537-1549) reigned nominally and were crowned by the conquistadors. Examples of this genealogy in individual portraits that are similar to these, as well as those already mentioned in the Denver Museum can be found in:- Brooklyn Museum , has a collection of 14 Portraits of Inca Kings, probably mid-18th century.  Oil on canvas (60 x 55.2cm- Lilly Library, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana.- The individual portrait of Atahuallpa is kept at the Ethnological Museum of Berlin.As well as these series of genealogies in sets of individual portraits, genealogies were also painted in one sole picture in which, depending on the period in which they were executed, the series of governors of the Inca Empire previous to the Spanish conquest was followed chronologically by portraits of the Spanish monarchs.There are magnificent examples of this type of painting, such as those kept in:- Lima Cathedral Museum, dated circa 1725.- The Pedro de Osma Museum in Lima, dating from the late 18th century / early 19th century.- The Carmen de Maipu Museum in Chile, which describes the intention of these types of pictures in the painting’s index card: “the inclusion of the Spanish monarchs responds to the necessity for uniting power, as a strategy of legitimisation and control in colonial society, given that, through these portraits the Spanish monarchs would assimilate the power and the deity that the Inca represented. And, on the contrary, the Incas were considered to be the equals of Spanish royalty, in that way being accepted and acknowledged in their role as former heads of state. The social function of these pictures varied depending on how the historical and political facts were presented.”- The Lima Museum of Art, has an interesting set mounted as a screen, described in their catalogue in this way: “This emblematic piece condenses different stages of art in Peru, it evokes the pre-Colombian past in the shape of a genealogy of the Incas, a theme which came up in the ...Provenance: - Private collection, Florence. - Private collection, Portugal.- Private collection, Spain.This lot comes from import, therefore, it has a guaranteed export permit. For buyers from outside the European Union, it will be exempt from estate taxes.

Millésime 25 · 20th anniversary of La Suite Subastas

Sale Date(s)
Lots: 60
Venue Address
Conde de Salvatierra, 8
Barcelona
08006
Spain

General delivery information available from the auctioneer

The purchase price includes the delivery of the lots in the venue of the auction. Transporting to other destinations is at the own risk of the client. The customer must contact "LST", to give the corresponding instructions for such transporting. "LST" is not responsible for the packaging or any accident incurred during transportation.

Important Information

It is important please, that you read our conditions of sale before the auction. If you need us to send them to you by mail, just ask for them.

We would like to remind you that in compliance with Spanish historical heritage laws, lots over 100 years old will need a license, which we will take care of processing for you. This process can take up to a month, as the Ministry of Culture holds only one meeting per month.

The Spanish administration does not charge anything for clients within the European Community, but for non-European Community buyers, the Spanish administration does apply fees. Please contact us for more details on the cost of these fees.

Terms & Conditions

CONDITIONS OF THE AUCTION:

I. REGISTRATION. To bid in the room customers must register at the beginning, filling out a form and picking a number that will identify them during the auction. Customers may be required to register in bank references or other guarantee system and if they do not prove the solvency "LST" will not accept bids and award the auction.

II. WRITTEN BIDS. "LST" will accept written bids, which will be formalized in the form provided by the room until the day before the auction. In such auctions, the room will bid in name of the client until the maximum stated in the offer and always at the lowest possible price. If there are two or more bids for the same amount, the one placed first will have the priority. Written bids received in advance, will have priority on the day of the auction.

III. TELEPHONE BIDS. "LST" will allow telephone bids, if interested people contact "LST" days before the auction providing personal data, ID card and the phone number which will be used by the staff of "LST" to call at the time of the auction. The buyer, within all the legal rights is making an offer for the asking price, when applies for telephone bid. "LST" will not take responsibility for any technical defects beyond its control, which may prevent to contact successfully the bidder during the auction.

IV. AUCTIONEER. The auction will be conducted by an auctioneer, director of the auction will be judge and arbitrator of it with full authority in its development, will award the lots to the highest bidder and is able to settle any controversy concerning lots sale, reject bids, divide lots or group them and remover objects from the room. Will be able to, if it is deemed suitable, not accept bids on the auction. His decision will be unappealable.

V. SALE OF LOTS. The lots are awarded to the highest bidder. Once the auctioneer blows the hammer, the buyer becomes responsible of the lot purchased, exempting "LST" of liability to for any damage and / or accidents that may occur. No refunds of lots.

VI. STARTING PRICE. The amount shown in the catalogue as the starting price for each lot will be, as a rule, the minimum selling price, except for exceptional cases where a reservation may be agreed upon with the seller or it set discretionary by the room.

VII. SCALE OF BIDS. The bids are set according to the following scale:

From 50.-€ to 200.-€…………………………………………..at 10.-€

From 200.-€ to 500.-€…………………………………… …25 in 25.-€

From 500.-€ to 1.000.-€………………………………..…..….50 in 50.-€

From 1.000.-€ to 2.000.-€………………………………..…100 in 100.-€

From 2.000.-€ to 5.000.-€……………………………….….250 in 250.-€

From 5.000.-€ to 10.000.-€…………………………………500 in 500.-€

From 10.000.-€ to 20.000.-€……………………………1.000 in 1.000.-€

From 20.000.-€ to 50.000.-€……………………………2.500 in 2.500.-€

From 50.000.-€ to 100.000.-€…………………………..5.000 in 5.000.-€

From 100.000.-€ to 100.000.-€………………………10.000 in 10.000.-€

From 200.000.-€ to 200.000.-€………………………25.000 in 25.000.-€

From 500.000.-€ to 500.000.-€………………………50.000 in 50.000.-€

VIII. RIGHT OF ADMISION. "LST" reserves the right to admission to the auction room and to reject, at its judgment, any purchase order, from clients whose solvency is not duly proved as well as not to sale auctions.

IX. SALE PRICES. The successful bidder of one or more lots must pay "LST" the final sale price achieves at auction, plus the 24,5 % plus 21% VAT on the commission, at total 29,64 % on Hammer Price.

X. CATALOG DATA. The catalogue data are obtained in order to careful research and advice, however, any responsibility is afforded about its accuracy. The lots will be auctioned in the state in which they are, not accepting any claims in restorations, breakage, damage, imperfections and, even description or numbering mistakes in the catalogue, in case of it, being the burden of the buyers to make sure before the auction that the description matches with their personal opinion about respective lot. The exhibition of the lots is intended to allow a perfect review and study of them.

XI. PAYMENT AND REMOVAL OF LOTS. Payment and removal of the lots will be held no later than five days following the auction. After this period expire without having the buyer removed the lot or lots purchases, it will accrue an expense of custody of 6 euros per day on each lot.

15 days after the auction without having the buyer paid and removes the sold lots, "LST" will inform the seller and there will begin judicial proceeding in order to obtain payment. The delay in payment by the purchaser of his/her sold lots will carry an interest increase at a rate of 1,5% per month.

XII. DELIVERY OF LOTS. The purchase price includes the delivery of the lots in the venue of the auction. Transporting to other destinations is at the own risk of the client. The customer must contact "LST", to give the corresponding instructions for such transporting. "LST" is not responsible for the packaging or any accident incurred during transportation.

XIII. RIGHT OF FIRT REFUSAL AND REPURCHASE. "LST" in order to article 38 of "Ley 16/1985 de 25 Junio del Patrimonio Histórico Español" (BOE. 155 June 29, 1985), will notify in advance to the Ministry of Culture, the content of their catalogues. Concerning the lots subject to the legislation referred to in the preceding paragraph, the Administration may exercise the rights of first refusal and repurchase according to the law. "LST" will watch over the protection of Artistic, Historical and Bibliographical Heritage of Spain. For customers out of European Community, a tax for export is required by the Administration.


XIV. EXPORT LICENSE. In compliance with Spanish historical heritage laws, lots over 100 years old need a export license, which we will take care of processing for you. The Spanish administration does not charge anything for clients within the European Community, but for non-European Community buyers, the Spanish administration does apply fees. Please contact us for more details on the cost of these fees.


XV. VALUE ADDED TAX (I.V.A). This tax will be accrued on commissions of "LST" for buyers, using the rates prevailing on the date of the auction.


XVI. DATA PROTECTION. In order to the "Ley 15/1999 de 13 de Diciembre, de Protección de Datos de Carácter Personal", the client authorize "LST", the inclusion of their data in a customer file, and for the promotion by "LST" of the objects at all times the rights of access, rectification or deletion of personal data by sending the appropriate request to the following address: LA SUITE SUBASTAS, C/ Conde Salvatierra, 8, 08006. Barcelona.


XVII. EXPRESS LEGAL JURISDICTION. These Conditions are governed by and interpreted in accordance with the rules of Spanish law. The mere act of participating in the auction as seller, buyer or bidder, implies acceptance of these Terms and Conditions.
Sales operations are understood to be held at the registered office of "LST", C/ Conde de Salvatierra, 8, 08006. Any dispute shall be taken to the competent courts of Barcelona, expressly waiving any other jurisdiction, in accordance with Article 55 of the "Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil".

See Full Terms And Conditions

Tags: Oil on Canvas, Portrait Painting, Oil painting, Portrait