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Evansville Museum to sell Pablo Picasso artwork

The board of trustees of the Evansville Museum of Arts, History & Science on Monday approved the execution of a contract to sell a rare Pablo Picasso-signed work of art from the museum’s collection. The board’s action was approved by the museum’s members at a meeting held Tuesday, Aug. 14.

Pablo Picasso Seated Woman with Red Hat (“Femme assise au chapeau rouge”) Image courtesy of the Evansville Museum of Arts, History & Science, credit to Michael Wheatley

Recently, the Evansville Museum learned the piece in its collection – “Seated Woman with Red Hat” (“Femme assise au chapeau rouge”) c. 1954-1956 – had not been identified as a Picasso in documentation provided to the museum when the piece was gifted in the 1960s. It has been in the museum’s storage area for nearly 50 years. The museum has determined that the expense and added requirements to properly secure a piece of potentially significant value are too great. The trustees therefore entered into a contract with the auction house Guernsey’s in New York, which will conduct a private sale of the work of art.

“Seated Woman with Red Hat” was created using a layered glass technique called gemmail (plural: gemmaux). Gemmail uses individual pieces of colored glass overlapped and joined together with clear liquid enamel and then fired. When illuminated from behind, gemmail produces a result that modulates color and captures light through many layers and textures of glass. Although Picasso was less-known for this art form, he produced 50 or more gemmaux masterpieces during his two years of study at the Malherbe Studio in France.

Picasso gave one half of his collection to the Malherbe family in return for their expertise, training and collaboration, and kept one half for himself. The pieces in Picasso’s portion of the collection were sold to private collectors.

Raymond Loewy, an internationally known industrial designer, purchased “Seated Woman with Red Hat” in the late 1950s and gifted the piece to the Evansville Museum in 1963. Loewy’s connection to the Evansville Museum was through Siegfried R. Weng, the museum’s director at the time.

When the Evansville Museum received the gift, associated documentation indicated that the piece was created by an artist named “Gemmaux” – confusing the name of the technique with the artist’s name – and was a design inspired by a Picasso painting, which is how it was cataloged by museum staff. It was noted that the piece was signed by Picasso. The piece was placed in museum storage and never displayed. Earlier this year, Guernsey’s in researching Picasso’s gemmaux works, contacted the Evansville Museum about the gift from Raymond Loewy. It was this contact from Guernsey’s that revealed the significance of the piece, prompting further research and study.

Learn more at www.emuseum.org

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