This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2015/mar/27/police-seize-picasso-painting-roman-statue-smugglers-italy
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Italian police seize £11m Picasso from pensioner who claims it was a gift | |
(about 4 hours later) | |
Italian police are trying to establish the true owner of a Picasso painting worth €15 m (£11m) after confiscating it from a pensioner who says he was given it for free. | |
The Rome resident, a former frame-maker, told detectives he received the work in 1978 as a thank-you gift for an act of kindness towards a recently bereaved customer. | |
A widower had come into his shop in a state of distress after breaking a photo frame in which he kept a picture of his late wife. Touched, the frame-maker replaced the glass for free. | |
Two days later, the elderly customer returned to the workshop and presented him with the Picasso, without giving any indication of its value or artistic significance. | |
According to the frame-maker’s story, it was only last year that he realised the 54cm x 45cm oil-on-canvas could be a Picasso, police said. | |
The painting is a representation of a violin and a bottle of Bass beer that police experts have authenticated as a 1912 work by the Spanish artist, then at the height of his Cubist phase. | |
The police became interested in it last year when auction house Sotheby’s, which had been instructed by the pensioner, attempted to secure a state authorisation to export it with a declared estimated value of €1.4m (£1m). | |
That triggered an investigation during which police were able to identify the work as corresponding to one mentioned in a 1961 edition of the Zervos, a catalogue of Picasso’s work written by the art critic Christian Zervos in conjunction with the artist that is considered the definitive guide to Picasso’s prodigious output. | |
Bottles of Bass pale ale, which carried a distinctive red triangle on their classic labels, feature in more than 40 Picasso paintings, mostly from his Cubist period. | |
The iconic British beer, once the most widely drunk in the world, also puts in an appearance in impressionist Édouard Manet’s 1882 painting A Bar at the Folies-Bergère. | |
The specialist police unit that deals with crimes related to art works and cultural artefacts unveiled two other significant seizures on Friday, including a Roman sculpture dating from the second or third century that has an estimated value of €8m (£7m). | |
The marble was dug up during unauthorised excavations in Tarquinia, a town just to the north of Rome famed for its roots in the post-Roman Etruscan period. | |
Police seized it as part of an investigation into the gang behind the illegal digs who, they believe, were planning to drive the marble to Switzerland to find a buyer. | |
The sculpture features the Roman god Mithra killing a bull and was said to be almost perfectly preserved. There are thought to be only two other marbles of similar composition and quality in the world – one is in the British Museum and the other is housed in one of the Vatican museums. | |
The third work recently recovered was another very valuable oil painting, a view of St Mark’s square in Venice by noted Italian landscape painter Luca Carlevarijs (1665-1731). | |
The work, which had been registered as stolen, was found following raids on the premises of a Milan art broker suspected of smuggling artworks to Switzerland with a view to selling them on to wealthy collectors in the US. |
Previous version
1
Next version