Dayton Daily News

Picasso painting brings $69.4 million

‘Femme au Béret’ sells at Sotheby’s auction in London.

- Scott Reyburn

Sotheby’s set the LONDON — year’s first benchmark price for trophy artworks at auction when Pablo Picasso’s 1937 painting “Femme au Béret et à la Robe Quadrillée (Marie-Thérèse Walter)” sold in London for $69.4 million. The prize piece in a 47-lot evening sale of Impression­ist, modern and Surrealist art, it was bought by a telephone bidder, and had been estimated to reach at least $48 million.

“It was a fantastic painting,” said Gérard Faggionato, a partner at the David Zwirner Gallery in London. “I haven’t seen such a vibrant Picasso for a long time. Look at the wall power.”

The brightly colored, 22-inch-high canvas, painted on Dec. 4 in the same year as masterpiec­es such as “Guernica” and “The Weeping Woman,” was a head and shoulders study of Picasso’s mistress and muse, Marie-Thérèse Walter, whom he had met in Paris 10 years earlier.

By 1937, Walter had given birth to Picasso’s daughter Maya, and was competing for the artist’s attention with Dora Maar, the model for “Weeping Woman.”

Unusually, “Femme au Béret” had never appeared on the market before, having been acquired by the owner directly from the artist’s estate, according to the Sotheby’s catalog. It was guaranteed to sell, courtesy of a third-party “irrevocabl­e bid.”

It attracted at least three telephone bidders and one in the room.

Picasso is currently living up to his reputation as the most bankable of modern artists. At this same Sotheby’s sale, Harry Smith, executive chairman and managing director of the London-based art advisers Gurr Johns, bought the evening’s three other Picassos on behalf of a client.

The large 1970 painting “Le Matador” was the most expensive of these, at$22.6 million, just above the low estimate.

Smith was bulk-buying Picasso for his client the night before at Christie’s. The adviser bought eight of the sale’s nine Picassos, spending more than $50.7 million.

Sellers have been keen to capitalize on the excitement generated by the Tate Modern exhibition “Picasso 1932 — Love, Fame, Tragedy,” which opens March 8, having transferre­d from the Musée National Picasso-Paris. Tate Modern’s first solo show devoted to Picasso, it chronicles, month by month, the intensely creative year in which the artist made his most sensuous paintings of Marie-Thérèse Walter.

These works are much coveted by wealthy collectors. “Le Rêve,” painted in January of that year, was bought in 2013 by billionair­e hedge-fund manager Steven A. Cohen for $155 million from casino magnate Steve Wynn in a private transactio­n. That painting is in the Tate Modern exhibition and is being used to advertise it.

“Picasso is a very powerful brand,” said Christian Ogier, a Paris dealer who specialize­s in 20th-century art.

“When you have a Picasso, you recognize it’s a Picasso with the first look. He’s consistent­ly good, and he has a future. A new generation will have taste for Picasso.”

 ?? FRANK AUGSTEIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS. ?? Pablo Picasso’s “Fémme au Beret et a la Robe Quadrillée (Marie-Thérèse Walter)” sold at auction Wednesday for $69.4 million during the Impression­ist and Modern Art Evening Sale, at Sotheby’s auction house in London. Walter was his muse.
FRANK AUGSTEIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS. Pablo Picasso’s “Fémme au Beret et a la Robe Quadrillée (Marie-Thérèse Walter)” sold at auction Wednesday for $69.4 million during the Impression­ist and Modern Art Evening Sale, at Sotheby’s auction house in London. Walter was his muse.

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