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Picasso's erotic etchings sell for US$ 2.2 million

News Desk (Agence France-Presse)
Paris
Tue, November 28, 2017

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Picasso's erotic etchings sell for US$ 2.2 million A visitor looks at the work "Fauno descubriendo a una mujer" by artist Pablo Picasso, which is part of Picasso's collection known as the Suite Vollard, at Antioquia's Museum in Medellin, Antioquia Department, Colombia, on June 11, 2009. (AFP/Raul Arboleda)

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series of 100 etchings by Picasso, which depict his personal and political turmoil in the 1930s, has sold for 1.9 million euros ($2.2 million) in Paris, auctioneers said.

The Spanish-born artist took seven years to complete the prints called the "Vollard Suite", which deal with his erotic obsessions and marital strife as well as the gathering storm clouds of war over Europe.

The hammer came down on the prints late Sunday as part of a weekend of sales in the French capital from the collection of art dealer Henri Petiet. Some 622 lots were sold for 3.3 million euros, which the auction house Ader Nordmann called an "enormous success".

It said the Picasso series was bought by an unnamed American collector.

Civil war erupted in Picasso's homeland as he was working on the series, leaving his alter ego in the drawings -- the minotaur -- lost and blind by the end.

Read also: Online exhibit shows hidden depths of Picasso's 'Guernica'

Picasso's technique also developed greatly over the years from his relatively simple early prints of his voluptuous mistress Marie-Therese Walter in the arms of a bearded sculptor, to the darker later pictures where she leads a blind, impotent minotaur by night.

The final three prints are portraits of the French art dealer Ambroise Vollard, who commissioned the series in 1930, giving Picasso paintings by Renoir and Cezanne in exchange.

With no telephone or online bidding allowed for the Paris sale, "there was an unbelievable atmosphere in the room," auctioneer David Nordmann said, which led to the "exceptional result".

Only a handful of galleries have a complete collection of the drawings: the Picasso Museum in Paris, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the National Gallery in Washington and the British Museum, which acquired its set for one million pounds (1.1 million euros) in 2011.

Among the other stellar works in the sale were Renoir's lithography "Pinning the hat", which went for 43,000 euros -- double its estimation -- as did Toulouse-Lautrec's "The jockey", which sold for 40,000 euros.

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