Truro News

Picasso portrait could sell for US$30 million

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LONDON — A late Picasso portrait of his paramour Jacqueline Roque is going up for auction for the first time, with an estimated price of up to $30 million. Christie’s auction house said Wednesday it will offer “Femme accroupie (Jacqueline)’’ at a Nov. 13 New York sale. Painted in October 1954, the portrait hung for years in Picasso’s private collection and has rarely been seen in public. Christie’s global president, Jussi Pylkkanen, says it is “a museumqual­ity painting’’ of “one of Picasso’s most elegant muses.’’ Roque was married to the artist from 1961 until his death in 1973.

It is being sold from a private collection, and Christie’s estimates it will fetch $20 million to $30 million.

HALIFAX

A fresh generation of children’s books is finding the grace notes in Halifax’s worst moment — a massive explosion that levelled much of the city 100 years ago but inspired acts of kindness that still resonate.

The books vary on how closely they approach the widespread injury and nearly 2,000 deaths that resulted from the massive Halifax Explosion of Dec. 6, 1917, when a French munitions ship collided with a Belgian relief vessel in the city’s wartime harbour.

Still, as hurricanes and earthquake­s batter communitie­s around the globe, the retelling of Halifax’s time of trial tend to come together in their desire to find hope amidst the floods and rubble.

“I didn’t want to dwell on the destructio­n, but more on the help that people gave,’’ said Marijke Simons, author of The Flying Squirrel Stowaways: from Nova Scotia to Boston (Nimbus), one of two picture books for young children that recall how Boston residents rushed north in a train to assist.

Other books deal with the experience­s of a Halifax newsboy, and of an orphaned girl who loses her family.

The Christmas tree given each year as a gift by Halifax to its southern neighbour is a key theme for Simons as well as for illustrato­r Belle DeMont and her father John DeMont in their book The Little Tree by the Sea: From Halifax to Boston with love (Nimbus).

The main character in The Little Tree by the Sea is an imaginary tree that grows on the slope of Citadel Hill overlookin­g the city, calling out in alarm as the Mont Blanc collides with the Imo.

Belle DeMont’s fiery depiction The aftermath of the 1917 Halifax ship explosion is shown in a file photo. A fresh generation of children’s books is finding the grace notes in Halifax’s worst moment, a massive explosion that levelled much of the city 100 years ago but inspired acts of kindness that still resonate.

of the blast doesn’t shy away from the terror of the event, though the story shows just a few examples of injured citizens.

Canary yellow streets and pea green city buildings prior to the event move into more sombre indigos and deep purple skies and seas afterwards, as the tree’s cry for help drifts across the water to Boston.

The little tree eventually grows tall in the “city by the sea’’ and offers itself as recollecti­on of love.

“It’s finding the sweet that counters the bitter always, in any situation. My favourite kids’ books are ones that goes down and up just like life does. You find solutions. You find silver linings,’’ Belle said in an interview.

Simons’ book only references the explosion indirectly, though it is focused on coping with adversity. The artist and teacher has created flying squirrels whose enormous eastern spruce becomes the annual gift from Halifax to its southern neighbour,

forcing them to seek a new home.

Simons, her husband and her granddaugh­ter travelled to the site at Waycobah, N.S., and watched as Mi’kmaq elders performed a smudging ceremony in the tree’s honour before it was cut and loaded on a truck for its journey into Halifax and then southwards.

The author leans over to speak to her granddaugh­ter as the sacred ceremony unfolds, saying, “Boston sent us a trainload of nurses and doctors. No one forgets a kindness like that.’’

She says she was inspired by how the Bostonians responded with its supplies, people and its knowledge of how to rebuild.

The artist said in her research she also ran across the work of the Massachuse­tts-Halifax Health Commission, formed as a direct outcome of the explosion, which produced health reforms that saved lives for generation­s to come.

More detailed accounts of response

are found in Allison Lawlor’s non-fiction book Broken Pieces: An Orphan of the Halifax Explosion (Nimbus), aimed at seven- to 10-year-old readers.

Lawlor tells the story of 14-year-old Barbara Orr, who was walking to a friend’s house when the explosion occurred. Readers learn about rescue efforts and historical events such as the bravery of Vincent Coleman, the railway dispatcher who stayed at his station to send out a warning.

The writer quotes television personalit­y Fred Rogers, who said, “When I was a boy and I would see scary things in the news, my mother would say to me: ‘Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping.’’’

Jacqueline Halsey, whose book Explosion Newsie (Formac) was published in 2015, will join John and Belle DeMont and Simons to discuss how children relate to the city’s most notable moment at a book festival in the city this weekend.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ??
THE CANADIAN PRESS

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