Police in Brazil arrest a suspect in the brutal slaying of a Manhattan art dealer
RIO DE JANEIRO — A suspect was arrested in the brutal killing in Brazil of an American art dealer who was the co-owner of a prominent gallery in Manhattan, police said Thursday.
Brent Sikkema, 75, was found dead Monday with 18 stab wounds in his Rio de Janeiro apartment.
Rio state police arrested a man whom they identified as Alejandro Triana Trevez near the city of Uberaba, in the neighboring state of Minas Gerais. The man, who local media say is Cuban, was on the run and was found resting in a gas station.
Police said Trevez took $3,000 from Sikkema’s home. Det. Felipe Curi, who leads the state police homicide unit, told CBN Rio that the main line of investigation is theft leading to homicide.
“Initial findings of our investigation indicate that Alejandro [Trevez] came from Sao Paulo specifically to commit this crime,” Curi said. The suspect then returned to Sao Paulo, leading investigators to believe he had “some kind of privileged information.”
Brazilian authorities say a fisherman has confessed to killing a British freelance journalist and an Indigenous expert in the remote Amazon.
Law enforcement obtained a 30-day prison warrant against Trevez, which Curi said would allow investigators to explore other leads and answer questions such as whether the two men knew each other.
Originally founded in 1991, Sikkema Jenkins & Co. shows works by Jeffrey Gibson, Arturo Herrera, Sheila Hicks, Kara Walker and other artists on 22nd Street in New York near the Chelsea Piers.
Sikkema began his career in 1971 at the Visual Studies Workshop in Rochester, N.Y., where he worked as director of exhibitions. He opened his first gallery in 1976 in Boston.
In 2021, during a trip to Zurich, Sikkema described himself on Instagram as a “chaos kind of guy” and said Brazil and Cuba were his preferred type of destination.
Brazilian artist Vik Muniz, whose work has been showcased in Sikkema’s gallery, paid tribute to his friend’s great “humanity.”
“I have spent more than thirty years of my life trying to pointlessly emulate his juggling of fearlessness, kindness and sophistication,” Muniz wrote under a photo of his mother and Sikkema he posted this week on Instagram. “Brent coated his flaws with humor with the same grace he hid his immense talent behind humbleness.
“I owe a lot of who I am as an artist to him, and with him, part of that seems to have disappeared forever.”
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