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Modern Art & Design presents Fernando Botero


Fernando Botero, "El cuarto de baño"

Bukowskis presents the work "El cuarto de baño" by Fernando Botero at the upcoming auction Modern Art & Design – the leading auction for modern art and design in the Nordics.

Fernando Botero described himself as a “post-abstractionist realist,” an artist who paints memories in a realist idiom. His canvases are populated by voluminous figures engaged in scenes of everyday life from his native Colombia. To Botero, these ample bodies are not exaggerated but rather elegant in their sensuality. “It’s to make them sensual that I let my figures swell,” he has remarked. Historical references in his work are unmistakable. After abandoning an early career as a matador in the early 1950s, Botero traveled to Europe, where he immersed himself in the traditions of the Renaissance, copying the works of old masters such as Goya, Velázquez, Uccello, and Piero della Francesca in Florence and Madrid.

His artistic breakthrough came during the 1960s while living in New York, where he exhibited seminal works such as Mona Lisa (1961) and The Presidential Family (1967). During this period, Botero solidified the painterly style that would become his hallmark—a visual language now widely recognized as “Boterismo.”



Before the advent of modernism in the early 20th century, religious iconography dominated the visual culture of both Latin America and Europe. These sacred images continue to resonate in contemporary art. Botero’s childhood in Medellín, Colombia, was steeped in the Catholicism that has shaped Latin American society, culture, and politics for over four centuries.

“There were no museums in Colombia when I was young. The only paintings I saw were those of Colombian Baroque artists in churches. When Colombian children go to church, they see all these Madonnas, so pure and perfect. In South America, China-like perfection is very much a part of an ideal of beauty… So, in contrast to Europe or North America, you connect the notions of art and beauty at a very early stage. I grew up with the idea that art is beautiful. All my life I’ve been trying to produce beautiful art, to discover all the elements that make up visual perfection.”
— Carlos Fuentes, Botero Women, New York, 2003, p. 42


”El cuarto de baño” at the exhibition ”Fernando Botero” at Moderna Museet, Stockholm, 29 September 2001 – 13 January 2002.



Botero’s oeuvre is deeply entwined with Colombian and broader Latin American identity. Through humor and a subtle irony, he constructs a magical world in which angels and sinners play out familiar narratives. One of his greatest artistic contributions lies in his distinctive exploration of genre, often incorporating satirical imagery as a commentary on contemporary social phenomena.

The female figure in the work The Bathroom / El cuarto de baño, exemplifies Botero’s signature sculptural and voluptuous form. Rendered with both wit and reverence, she appears as a modern-day Venus emerging from the bath, or perhaps as a biblical Susanna, spied upon by a diminutive male figure in the tub. She proudly presents herself with all her splendor, unashamed and unapologetic.


View the catalogue

Fernando Botero with filmmaker Erwin Leiser and actors, 1980.


The work will be sold at Modern Art & Design

Estimate: 6 000 000 – 8 000 000 SEK


Viewing: May 14–19, Berzelii Park 1, Stockholm
Open May 14 12 AM–6 PM, weekdays 11 AM–6 PM, weekends 11 AM–4 PM

Live auction: May 20–21, Arsenalsgatan 2, Stockholm

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