United States authorities have recovered a 1911 painting by Picasso worth millions that disappeared from Paris, France in 2001, the Department of Justice says. La Coiffeuse was intercepted by customs agents in Newark, New Jersey after it was sent from Belgium in a FedEx package with a declared value of thirty euros, the DOJ announced in a press release that did not disclose the crucial and likely very interesting detail of why exactly customs agents realized they should be looking in low-value FedEx packages for a painting by one of the greatest artists who ever lived. From the release:Rico says there's a movie in here somewhere... (Topkapi, maybe?)The shipping label attached to the package containing La Coiffeuse described its contents as Art Craft / 30 E / Joyeux Noel, indicating that the package contained a low-value handicraft shipped as a holiday present. The commercial invoice shipped with the painting similarly described the contents as an Art Craft / Toy valued at thirty euros, or approximately $37 dollars.The painting was last exhibited in Munich, Germany in 1998, The New York Times reports, and disappeared from a storage area at the Centre Georges Pompidou in 2001. The United States has filed a civil forfeiture claim that would allow the painting to be returned to France; it’s not clear who sent or intended to receive the smuggled artwork. More to come on this story of international intrigue, hopefully.
27 February 2015
Stolen Picasso recovered
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