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  • 19
    Jun
    2012
    11:26am, EDT

    Texas police search for man who spray-painted over a Picasso

    Police in Texas are searching for a vandal who was captured on surveillance video spray-painting on "Woman in a Red Armchair" inside the Houston Art Museum. TODAY's Natalie Morales has more details.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    Police in Texas are searching for a man who vandalized an original Picasso painting at a Houston art museum.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    The man was seen on a museum surveillance camera spray-painting Pablo Picasso’s 1929 "Woman in a Red Armchair" in a room at the Menil Collection and then running off.

    A bystander in the museum also recorded the incident using his smartphone camera.

    The video shows the vandal approaching the painting and blasting the canvas with spray paint. He used a stencil to paint an image of a bull and the word "conquista," which means "conquest" in Spanish, over the original portrait.


    “I was texting somebody on my phone, and as soon as I saw him walk up towards the Picasso, I pressed the record button on my camera app,” the witness, who didn’t want to be identified, told KPRC in Houston. “He only took one second. He spray-painted it, and then he walked off.”

    Museum security officials discovered the vandalized artwork almost immediately and rushed the painting – with spray paint barely dry – to the museum’s on-site conservation lab, reported the Houston Chronicle.

    Menil communications director Vance Muse told the Houston Chronicle that restoration efforts for the painting, one of nine Picaso artworks owned by the museum since 1956, have “an excellent prognosis.”

    “The most important thing is to get the painting to full health, which is happening,” Vance said. “All the spray paint has been removed. It is in the right hospital. The painting now needs to rest.”

    The museum said it hopes to have the painting back on display later this week.

    "How sad that someone would enter and do something like that to a work of art that should be enjoyed by everybody," Muse told KPRC.

    The bystander, whose video was uploaded to YouTube last Wednesday, said the vandal identified himself as an up-and-coming Mexican-American artist and said he spray-painted the artwork because he wanted to “honor” Picasso’s work.

    Houston Police confirm the case is under investigation as “criminal mischief,” a crime that carries a maximum penalty of two years in jail. No arrests have been made.

    This isn't the first incident of vandalism involving a Picasso painting. In February 1974, artist Tony Shafrazi spray-painted the words "Kill Lies All" over Picosso's "Guernica" at the Museum of Modern Art. Shafrazi, who currently owns an art gallery in New York, said at the time he wanted to involve himself in Picasso's work and bring the painting "up to date."

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    138 comments

    "Conquista" indeed. A Mexican, spraying graffiti on a painting created by a Spanish painter, to protest against the United Staes, where he moved to in order to escape the life he would have had in the country of his birth. Oh, the irony.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: picasso, vandal, spray-paint
  • 12
    Jun
    2012
    7:07pm, EDT

    Stolen Picasso worth $30,000 found lying against a fence

    Someone may not have known what they had.


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    A Pablo Picasso lithograph has been found after it was reported stolen in May from a home of jailed former Ukrainian Prime Minister Pavlo Lazarenko after an illegal teenage party, the Marin Independent Journal reported. 


    The Novato, Calif., home's caretaker reported the painting missing the next day. Also stolen were $5,000 worth of computers and candlesticks, the paper reported. 

    The teens ravaged the nine-bedroom, 19,500-square-foot home before police showed up to break up the gathering. 

    "They had gotten in and basically ransacked multiple rooms in the house," Novato police Sgt. Eric Riddell told the paper. 

    The $30,000 lithograph, titled "femme au chignon," was found by a resident leaning against a fence along Burning Tree Drive near the entrance to a trail. Police speculated that it was placed there to be found. The painting is one of 50 that were made in 1957, the paper reported. 

    Police haven't recovered any of the computers or candlesticks. 

    Lazarenko is in prison on money laundering charges and is due to be released in November, NBCBayArea.com reported. The home is owned by a holding company that prosecutors have tied to Lazarenko, NBCBayArea.com said.

    Lazarenko was appointed prime minister of Ukraine in May 1996 but resigned the next year after a falling out with President Leonid Kuchma. He fled to the U.S. in 1999 and was arrested in New York and eventually transferred to San Francisco, where he was prosecuted on money-laundering and fraud charges. 

    Marin County, where the home is located, has filed to collect $2.1 million in back taxes and other fees, the paper reported. 

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    10 comments

    Wow! Maybe the kid(s) who stole it left it there after realizing they could not get away with selling it. Or maybe they just didn't realize the worth.

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    Explore related topics: art, san-francisco, picasso, marin-county, lazarenko
  • 10
    May
    2012
    12:09pm, EDT

    Man pays $14 for signed Picasso at thrift store, sells it for $7,000

    By Barbara Rodriguez, The Associated Press

    COLUMBUS, Ohio — An unemployed Ohioan was browsing at his local thrift store for items he could restore and resell when he spotted a Picasso poster with the word “Exposition” written across the front, some French words, and the image of a warped round face. He handed over $14.14 for what he saw as a nice commercial print.

    Some Internet searches later — and a closer look at markings on the lower right area — and he sold what’s believed to be a signed Picasso print for $7,000 to a private buyer who wants to remain anonymous.

    “A pretty darn good return,” said Zachary Bodish of Columbus with a chuckle. “Can’t get that at the bank.”

    The 46-year-old Bodish, who was an event and volunteer coordinator at a local museum for six years, originally turned to the Internet and a personal blog to write about his neat find from early March. Bodish had lately been supplementing his income with buying and reselling restored furniture, and he suddenly realized he may have hit jackpot.

    “I could tell it was not a modern print,” he said. “So I thought, ‘Well, it’s probably not really a fine Picasso print. What’s the chance of finding that in a thrift store in Columbus, Ohio?”

    His online search led him to the print’s history as an exhibition advertisement. And he began to look closely at some very faded red writing on the lower right area, which he originally thought were random pencil marks from the thrift store.

    “It wasn’t until I realized where the signature would be, and that those little red marks were right where the signature should be, that I got a stronger magnifying glass out and determined that, ‘Holy cow! It’s really a Picasso.’”

    Bodish said he consulted with art experts and met with a representative from Christie’s auction house to authenticate the piece. A Christie’s representative confirmed that Bodish met with a specialist, but the auction house said its policy is not to comment on items that aren’t sold through them. In this case, Bodish decided to sell the print privately in April.

    Lisa Florman, an associate history professor at Ohio State University, has written several essays and a book on Picasso. She said the print is a linocut, meaning it’s a design carved out and pressed with ink onto paper. She examined the print only through photos, but she said it’s very unlikely the piece is forged because the piece would sell for so low in the grand scheme of major art fraud. She said she’s examined many forged Picasso signatures in the past, but felt confident about Bodish’s print.

    Florman said Picasso designed the print to advertise a 1958 Easter exhibition of his ceramic work in Vallauris, France. She said the artist did these prints for several years, and it’s hard to tell how many are around today. There were 100 prints made for the ceramics exhibition, and Picasso signed them all.

    But Florman said Bodish’s print, which is marked as number six, is valuable for being in the artist’s proof range. That means it’s possibly one of only a handful he personally reviewed before they were mass produced.

    “Any of the 100 are considered original prints,” she said. “There’s certainly some collectors who really place a premium on a single-digit number because it indicates the artist’s greater involvement with the actual printing, so those particular prints can fetch a higher price.”

    Florman said Picasso signed so many prints, it’s very plausible the piece ended up at a thrift store in the Midwest.


    Follow @ TODAY_ent

    “It’s kind of a fun story,” she said. “There’s nothing about it that seems fishy.”

    Ed Zettler, a 72-year-old retired English teacher from Columbus, claims the print sat in his basement for years before he decided to donate it to the thrift store where Bodish later found it. Zettler, who said it was a housewarming present given to him by a friend in the 1960s, has no hard feelings about what happened.

    “I gave it away. Someone else found it. He fortunately saw more. It’s his,” Zettler said. “That’s the risk you take when you bring something to the thrift store.”

    Bodish said he plans to use the money for day-to-day bills, including his mortgage, utilities, food and even more quirky purchases at thrift stores and garage sales.

    “It’s just been a rough struggle to make ends meet,” he said. “I may have been fated to find it.”

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