A New England homeowner received a shock recently when they rediscovered a rare Pablo Picasso work in their relative’s Maine home. The mixed-media painting attributed has been sold after spending 50 years in a closet in a house in Maine, US. John McInnis Auctioneers, in Massachusetts, confirmed that the painting entitled Le Tricorne sold.
The 40 x 40 centimetre painting is signed and dated in the year 1919. It is believed to be a study of the stage curtain Picasso painted for a ballet of the same name that debuted that year in London, according to the New-York Historical Society. That curtain has been on display at the historical society in New York City since 2015.
The website liveauctioneers.com reported the sale price of the painting was $150,000, plus a 24 per cent buyer’s premium.
Neither the buyer nor the seller was named, but the seller gave a statement on the website saying the painting was found in a closet of a home his father inherited from a female relative who studied art in Europe in the 1920s.
“This painting was discovered in a house owned by my great aunt which was passed down to her from her uncle in the late 1930s,” the statement reads. “There were several paintings kept in a closet for 50 years (including this example) which were left by her at the time of the passing of the house to my father and now to me.”
The buyer will have at least 120 days to authenticate the painting with The Claude Picasso Administration, which is managed by the artist’s son.