Picasso Loan to Palestinian Art Academy Suffers Complicated Obstacles
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, October 6, 2024


Picasso Loan to Palestinian Art Academy Suffers Complicated Obstacles
Pablo Picasso's painting Buste de Femme, 1943 is seen. Palestinian and Dutch curators are scrambling to bring the 7 million dollar painting by Picasso to the West Bank, a volatile region where it will travel through Israeli checkpoints before landing at an art academy without the proper facilities to house it. Organizers hope it will be on display in Ramallah by early summer, but aren't making any grand announcements until all details are ironed out. AP Photo/Peter Cox, Van Abbe Museum.

By Tia Goldenberg, Associated Press



JERUSALEM (AP).- A Palestinian art academy is preparing to spruce itself up for a famous guest: a $7 million Pablo Picasso masterpiece that would be the first displayed in the West Bank. But simply arranging the painting's journey remains a far more difficult work in progress over complications such as finding reliable transport and clearing Israeli checkpoints.

The more than yearlong negotiations and planning — drawing in the Israeli military, Palestinian curators and Dutch museum officials — highlight the obstacles for even ordinary commerce or movement within the West Bank or through the few openings in the separation barrier with Israel.

"Of course, at the beginning, we saw these complications but didn't know to what extent this would reach," said Remco de Blaaij, the curator at the Van Abbemuseum in Eindhoven, the Netherlands, who is overseeing the proposed loan of Picasso's 1943 "Buste de Femme."

If the painting makes it to the International Academy of Art, Palestine, by the summer — and that remains an open question — it will become the most valuable and prestigious artwork ever shown in the West Bank.

The small art school in Ramallah put in the loan request in early 2010. Normally, such inter-museum exchanges are routine and take about six months to coordinate. But de Blaaij said the logistics are still being addressed for the 52-mile (88-kilometer) trip from Israel's international airport near Tel Aviv to Ramallah.

"The main concern is with getting into the West Bank and even more with getting out of there," de Blaaij said. "You never know what's going to happen at checkpoints."

Beyond that, Israelis aren't allowed to drive to certain parts of the West Bank because of safety concerns. Palestinians' freedom of movement is limited within the West Bank. Those seeking to enter Israel require a permit and often wait for hours in line at security checkpoints.

So curators are still hunting for a reliable transport company that can drive in both Israel and the West Bank. De Blaaij said they have found an insurer but didn't want to go into details.

The 39-by-31 inch (100-by-80 centimeter) oil-on-canvas work — a cubist deconstruction of a woman's face, dominated by gray hues — is the Dutch museum's most valuable piece of art and has traveled before to Sao Paolo, Brazil. For the Palestinian academy, however, it's more than just a chance to host a renowned painting.

The Academy hopes the loan will encourage other institutions to send artworks to the West Bank. Tina Sherwell, the director of the Ramallah art school, said it will give Palestinians a chance to view world-class pieces without facing the daunting journey to Israel's museums that are filled with famous works by artists including Vincent van Gogh, Paul Cezanne and Rene Magritte.

"The arrival of the painting is a historic event for us," Sherwell said. "It is important to be able to put on for public view a historic work of art, for the first time."

The 5-year-old art academy plans to begin work this month for temperature and humidity controls needed to protect the Picasso. When the "Buste de Femme" was sent to Brazil, it was accidentally left in the sun and damaged, said de Blaaij.

Elizabeth Merritt of the Washington, D.C.-based American Association of Museums said lending paintings to institutions in conflict zones requires the lender to perform a different kind of risk assessment, weighing whether displaying the painting is worth any harm it may face.

For years, the West Bank was the scene of violence between Palestinian militants and the Israeli military. Today, the territory — governed from Ramallah by the Western-backed Palestinian Authority but under Israeli security control — is largely quiet, but attacks occur on occasion.

The other Palestinian area, the Gaza Strip, is held by the anti-Israeli faction Hamas.

For the Van Abbemuseum, the reward of giving Palestinians a rare glimpse at a masterpiece outweighs the many challenges.

"We see it as spreading knowledge," de Blaaij said. "It would be lovely if we could do it and make it not only an idea."


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press.










Today's News

April 6, 2011

Prado Museum Presents an Exhibition of a Previously Unknown Period in Ribera's Career

Museum of Modern Art Releases Free iPad App for Downloading MoMA E-Books

Sotheby's Sets Record for an Islamic Work of Art at Auction with the £7.4 Million Achieved for the Shahnameh

Christie's Backs Stubbs to Join Old Masters Elite, Painting Expected to Fetch $33 Million

Chinese Government Dismisses International Concerns Over Missing Artist Ai Weiwei

Exhibition at Topography of Terror Documentation Center Marks 50 Years Since Eichmann Trial

Revealed: Swiss Architect Peter Zumthor's Design for 11th Serpentine Gallery Pavilion

Antiquities, Arms and Armour, Arts and Crafts at Hermann Historica's 61st Auction

Plymouth State University Acquires Celebrated Poet Robert Frost's Letters to Pal

Exhibition of 17th-Century Floral Splendour at Rijksmuseum's Branch at Schiphol Airport

Italian Researchers Announce Hunt in Florence for Remains of Possible Mona Lisa Model

Masterful Works to Go on Auction at Christie's Russian Art Sale in New York in April

Musee Du Quai Branly Presents Exhibition on Dogon Culture and Art History

Strong Prices for Swann Gallerys' March 24 Auction of Fine Photographs

Mughal Masterpiece: Portrait of Emperor Jahangir Sells for £1.4 Million at Bonhams

High Museum of Art Appoints Kimberly Watson New Director of Museum Advancement

Childhood. Photographs by Isabel Muñoz on View at IVAM

Film Posters from Ghana on View at The International Design Museum in Munich   

Tate Britain Presents Renowned British Architect James Stirling: Notes from the Archive

Picasso Loan to Palestinian Art Academy Suffers Complicated Obstacles

A Hard, Merciless Light: The Worker-Photography Movement, 1926-1939 at Reina Sofia Museum

In New Book Jenness Cortez Reexamines the Classic Paradox of Realism

Banksy Images Created on Third Anniversary of Hurricane Katrina to Sell at Bonhams

Inland Architect Image Database Now Available on Art Institute of Chicago Website

Government of China Detention of Contemporary Artist Ai Weiwei Tests Depth of Crackdown

Max Penson: Photography between Revolution and Tradition at Nailya Alexander Gallery

Artprice: the 2010 Art Market Annual Report - China Winner of the Past Decade

artMRKT Hamptons to Debut July 14-17, 2011

Ty Pennington, Cineflix Productions and Heritage Auctions Team Up for ABC-TV Pilot




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful