Showing posts with label Picasso. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Picasso. Show all posts

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Picasso, Whitechapel Boys & Freud.

A child psychiatrist friend suggested that we should meet at the newly re-opened Whitechapel Gallery. What a marvelous suggestion it turned out to be. To be confronted with the giant tapestry of the famous Picasso Guernica was already the highlight.

“We could go home now!” My friend joked. “Indeed!”

Whitechapel was part of Guernica history.

“For this, the first in a series of year-long artists’ commissions, Macuga has conceived a unique venue for public gatherings which references a key moment in the Whitechapel Gallery’s history. In 1939 the Gallery hosted Picasso’s Guernica, an outcry against Fascist war atrocities, to drum up support for the Republican forces fighting in Spain. In 1955 Nelson Rockefeller commissioned a life- size tapestry of Picasso’s painting. Some thirty years later this was lent to the United Nations Headquarters in New York where it has hung ever since outside the Security Council. Offered as a deterrent to war, in 2003 the tapestry was covered by a blue curtain in front of which Colin Powell delivered his fateful speech on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq.” (The Bloomberg Commission: Goshka Macuga: The Nature of the Beast )



Guernica, mural painting by Pablo Picasso, 1937.
© 1998 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York


We did not leave and we were pleased we didn’t:
“In the gallery alongside a new reading room there is currently a display of letters, books, catalogues, paintings and drawings relating to the Whitechapel Boys: the group of Jewish painters and writers (they included David Bomberg, Jacob Epstein, Mark Gertler and Isaac Rosenberg) who met in the library in the early decades of the 20th century.”

Racehorses David Bomberg It was only a small but thought provoking selection. “Using the Whitechapel Library as a meeting place, their discussions contributed to the founding of British Modernism. Strongly iconoclastic, the painters and sculptors in the group began to experiment with dynamic form and abstraction while the writers and poets searched for innovative prose to express their philosophical and political views. Highlights of this exhibition include Jacob Epstein’s Study for Rock Drill and Jacob Kramer’s The Day of Atonement, the first edition of Isaac Rosenberg’s Youth, John Rodker’s Collected Poems from 1912-1925, and items from their personal collections including the manuscript of Clare Winsten’s autobiography and Alfred Wolmark’s early sketch books.”
Whitechapel Gallery

Girl with Roses Lucian Freud Whitechapel Gallery
We were perhaps not too happy with some of the other exhibits. However it was reassuring to see Lucian Freud’s portrait of his first wife, Girl with Roses, that was bought by the museum in 1948 for £157 10s.

Video: Guernica
Whitechapel: Exhibitions

Guernica:
History, Picasso, The Novel
Picasso Posts:
Picasso, Medicine and Lloyds
Picasso and Tradition
Picasso: Challenging the Past
Can They Draw: From Picasso to Matisse
Try Illness First, then Children
The Book: The Cockroach Catcher

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Can They Draw: From Picasso to Matisse

EBA-Evidence Based Art Critique

It was in a BBC documentary a few years ago about the Turner Prize when the obvious question was asked: "Can xxxxxx xxxx (one of the nominees that year) draw?" The art experts participating in the discussion were all artful dodgers who managed not to give a straight answer.

A couple of years back I was in The Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg and saw their famous Matisse collection amongst a host of other treasures.


The Dance Hermitage St Petersburg

Matisse’s poster-like presentations led a few fellow travellers to ask the same question: Can Matisse draw?

Picasso is one of the artists that I have featured on this blog.

Juggler with Still Life 1905 NGA

Yes I am a great fan of Picasso but if anyone should ask me that same question of Picasso, I know what my answer would be and I would produce my evidence.




Earlier this year I was visiting some old school friends in Washington D.C., where in a few days time the world's media will descend to witness history in the making: the inauguration of Barack Obama.



National Gallery of Art Washington D.C.

At the National Gallery of Art (NGA) there, the answers to both the Matisse and Picasso questions can be easily found.

For the occasional museum visitor Picasso may be synonymous with cubism and paintings like this one:




The NGA had these as well.



Picasso Family of Saltimbanques, 1905


Tragedy, 1903

Read more about these here and here.

Now Henri Matisse:

We saw the paper cut-outs:

Mmmm: Can Matisse Draw?

Then we saw these paintings by Matisse:


Lorette with Turban, Yellow Jacket., 1917


La Coiffure, 1901

Can Matisse draw?!

Grand Rounds : 5:18: Ten Suggestions For Healthcare Reform in Medpage By Val Jones, MD Inauguration day issue.

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Sunday, July 20, 2008

Try Illness First, then Children

Le Rêve ownership trail

It is fascinating how research on the World Wide Web can throw up amazing things from different corners of the globe.

When I tried to look up who owned Picasso’s Le Rêve before Steve Wynn, something interesting showed up. From the Guardian (July 2007):

“He was a serially rich hedge fund manager, a New York socialite married to the granddaughter of ex-US president Dwight D. Eisenhower; the owner of four dozen works of art by Degas, Renoir and Cézanne, he paid $244m (£120m) in 1998 for Van Gogh's ‘Dr Gachet’ and Picasso's ‘Le Rêve’.

This week he is sitting with eight others in the dock in Vienna accused of breach of trust and fraud in one of Austria's biggest corporate scandals.”

Wolfgang Flöttl is his name. The scandal broke in 2006 and he was alleged to have carried out speculative dealings, sparking Bawag losses of almost 1bn euros (£690m). Interestingly Flöttl is the son of the Bawag’s former head, and Bawag, which used to be owned by the Austrian Labour Federation, is a bank set up in 1922 in Austria for waiters and carpenters.

For waiters and carpenters, indeed there is money to be made everywhere!!!

Flöttl also had close personal and business association with the ex-chief of Refco, Phillip Bennett, a British citizen. Refco, a major US commodities brokerage firm and one of the world’s largest, went public in August 2005 and filed for bankruptcy protection just weeks later – after disclosing that a $430 million debt owed to Refco by a firm controlled by Mr. Bennett had been concealed, and after securing a $350million loan from Bawag only a few days earlier, via Flöttl.

“In stifling heat the court has heard from prosecutor Georg Krakow how ‘everything has gone’ from the €1.4bn Bawag invested in ‘forbidden speculations’ and ‘disastrous clandestine deals’ run by a ‘little clique’. Krakow, armed with 70,000 pages of documents, is seeking up to 10 years in jail for the accused, including two ex-CEOs, Helmut Elsner and Johann Zwettler….

Elsner, a 72-year-old who fled to his sumptuous villa on the Côte d'Azur when the scandal broke but was extradited in February despite heart surgery and pleads innocence, was said by his lawyer Wolfgang Schubert to be ‘a loving family man who sits with his granddaughter on his lap and reads her stories’”.

To get sympathy, always try illness first, and then for character reference, add children for good measure.

In Austria Elsner was known for his lavish lifestyle, passion for sports cars and penchant for smoking large, expensive cigars while walking his dog.

But the Guardian did not think that judge Claudia Bandion-Ortner would be buying into that old chestnut.

The report continued:

“But Flöttl, who fell out with Elsner at a meeting in London in late 2000, has been singing to the authorities, according to his lawyer, Herbert Eichenseder, who proclaimed his innocence and said he had supplied 70% of the evidence.”

In times like this you sure know who your friends are.

Was justice done in the end?

Earlier this month, all nine defendants were found guilty and sentenced by Judge Claudia: Elsner to nearly 10 years behind bars and Flöttl two and half years, most of that suspended.

Bennett, the ex Refco chief, was sentenced in US to 16 years in prison.

The judge commented: Mr. Bennett and others like him who break the law in their zeal to be among the world’s richest people are “staggeringly arrogant.”

The Refco lawyer was also indicted. From WSJ (December 2007):

“In a rare case of a lawyer being charged in connection with the alleged wrongs of a client, Chicago lawyer Joseph Collins was indicted today on fraud and other charges in connection with the 2005 collapse of Refco.”

What an intriguing web of corporate greed and fraud, and yet we owe it the story of Le Rêve!

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Monday, June 2, 2008

Picasso, Medicine and Lloyds

Photo © Am Ang Zhang/Bauhinia Press 2008

Trivia question: What is the link between Picasso, medicine and Lloyds (of London)?

Here is the answer.

Retinitis Pigmentosa – latest advance in Medicine

Retinitis Pigmentosa is the name given to a group of hereditary disorders of the retina, a sort of sensor like those on digital cameras that is responsible for transmitting images formed by the lens to the brain for interpretation. The disorder can affect different receptor cells and some sufferers may have a slower rate of deterioration than others. There is often a gradual loss of peripheral vision which makes sufferers more vulnerable to knocking things around them.

(In case you are wondering – no, Picasso did not suffer from retinitis pigmentosa.)

Very recently
London’s Moorfield Hospital did a trial of an artificial eye device (called Argus II) developed by a US firm Second Sight for such sufferers. A tiny camera and transmitter is attached to a pair of glasses, powered by a wireless microprocessor and battery pack that can be worn on the belt. An ultra-thin electronic receiver and electrode panel is implanted in the eye

Exciting news indeed, though it is too late to prevent the damage to one famous Picasso painting.

Le Rêve by Picasso

There were many women in Picasso’s life, and a number of them have been immortalized in his paintings, giving the proud owners a highly valuable asset and of course in some cases a very pleasant picture to look at.

Picasso: Woman in White Metropolitan Museum of Art

“Although the model was always thought to be the artist's Russian wife Olga Khokhlova, it has recently been suggested that Picasso's muse was actually an American beauty, Sara Murphy, wife of the painter Gerald Murphy, with whom Picasso was infatuated between 1921 and 1924.

We may never know the true identity of the sitter, but since Picasso frequently fused the features of different people into a single idealized portrait, it is possible that this is just such a case. If so, the features of Olga and Sara are integrated here into a masterful and striking composition, full of tenderness and classical beauty.”

Metropolitan Museum of Art

This painting really shows that Picasso could truly paint and draw. We cannot say the same of some modern artists who should perhaps remain nameless.

Could you however imagine how Picasso’s style evolved from this to Le Rêve?

This is a painting of Picasso’s 24-year old mistress, Marie-Thérèse Walter.

“Le Rêve” by Picasso
Christie's file photo via AP

Le Rêve was first bought for $7,000 in 1941 by Victor and Sally Ganz of New York City. It was sold at Christie's auction house on

November 11, 1997 for an unexpectedly high $48.4 million, apparently to Wolfgang Flöttl, an Austrian born financier who later sold it to casino magnate Steve Wynn for an undisclosed sum, estimated to be about $60 million.

On October 9th 2006, news first broke on the pages of the New York Post:

Cubist Killer was the headline and apparently the painting had suffered a six-inch tear.

Two weeks later the New Yorker revealed the full story in The $40-Million Elbow.

Nora Ephron, who wrote Heartburn (inspired by the affair of her second husband, Carl Bernstein of Watergate fame, with Margaret Jay, daughter of Jim Callaghan), When Harry Met Sally, Sleepless in Seattle, etc. wrote about the episode after the New York Post let the cat out of the bag. As you might expect, her account was most entertaining.

“The buyer of the painting, Wynn told us, was a man named Steven Cohen. Everyone seemed to know who Steven Cohen was, a hedge fund billionaire who lived in Connecticut in a house with a fabulous art collection he had just recently amassed. ‘This is the most money ever paid for a painting,’ Steve Wynn said. The price was $4 million more than Ronald Lauder had recently paid for a Klimt. Oh, that Klimt. It had set a bar, no question of that, and Wynn was thrilled to have beaten it. He invited us to come see the painting before it moved to Connecticut, never to be seen again by anyone but people who know Steven Cohen.
There, on the wall, were two large Picassos, one of them Le Reve. Steve Wynn launched into a long story about the painting -- he told us that it was a painting of Picasso's mistress, Marie-Therese Walter, that it was extremely erotic, and that if you looked at it carefully (which I did, for the first time, although I'd seen it before at the Bellagio) you could see that the head of Marie-Therese was divided in two sections and that one of them was a penis. This was not a good moment for me vis a vis the painting. In fact, I would have to say that it made me pretty much think I wouldn't pay five dollars for it.”

My sentiment completely. On the other hand, I would have the Woman in Whilte hanging all the time in my best room.

“He raised his hand to show us something about the painting -- and at that moment, his elbow crashed backwards right through the canvas.
There was a terrible noise.
Wynn stepped away from the painting, and there, smack in the middle of Marie-Therese Walter's plump and allegedly-erotic forearm, was a black hole the size of a silver dollar - or, to be more exactly, the size of the tip of Steve Wynn's elbow -- with two three-inch long rips coming off it in either direction.”

Steve Wynn has retinitis pigmentosa.

For further detail I urge you read Nora’s full account.

The Lloyds of London Connection

Where did Lloyds of London come into this drama?

Well, Mr Wynn would not have the painting worth $139m uninsured, would he? What is interesting is that he then tried to make a claim for $54 million in lost value due to damage, and not surprisingly, Lloyds was not exactly forthcoming.
USA Today on Jan,13th 2007 reported:

“A day after filing a lawsuit against Lloyd's, Wynn on Friday attacked the insurance industry as a whole, accusing insurance companies of ‘irresponsible, careless, inconsiderate and deliberate evasive behavior’ that too often works for them.

He said insurers play ‘dirty tricks’ and habitually delay responding to claims, hoping to wear down those making claims and get them to settle for much less than what they are owed.

‘Most folks that have insurance can't afford the legal fees, so they take what they get,’ Wynn said in a telephone interview. ‘There's only one way to stop this kind of thing, and that is to go to court.’”

Guess what, Lloyds eventually settled for an undisclosed sum. Perhaps Nora could find out for us how much he got. Steve Wynn can certainly afford his legal fees. Hopefully Argus II will be ready soon enough before another painting gets damaged.

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Madness and Modernity, Bobby Baker & The Peril of Diagnosis
Teratoma: One Patient One Disease?
Teratoma: An Extract,
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House M.D.: Modern Tyranny
Picasso and Tradition
Picasso, Whitechapel Boys and Freud.
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Monday, May 26, 2008

Picasso Medicine and Lloyds

Coming Soon

Trivia question: what is the link between Picasso, medicine and Lloyds (of London)?



© Museu Picasso of Barcelona




Lloyds of London© 2008 Am Ang Zhang/Bauhinia Press