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‘Joyful’ portrait of Picasso’s daughter Maya sells at auction for over £18m

The piece was one of five works that was sold for more than £15 million at the sale by auction house Sotheby’s on Wednesday

Mike Bedigan
Thursday 02 March 2023 00:05 EST
A portrait by Pablo Picasso of his daughter Maya has sold for more than £18 million at auction
A portrait by Pablo Picasso of his daughter Maya has sold for more than £18 million at auction (Tristan Fewings/Getty Images for Sotheby’s/PA)

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A portrait by Pablo Picasso of his daughter Maya has sold for more than £18m at an auction.

The piece was one of five works that was sold for more than £15m at the sale by auction house Sotheby’s on Wednesday.

Titled Fillette au bateau, Maya, it is a “joyful” portrait of the Spanish artist’s daughter, Maya Widmaier-Picasso – painted in 1938 when she was just two and a half years old.

Filled with exuberant colour and energy, the piece was created shortly after Picasso had completed his monumental Guernica, and encapsulates the happiness Maya brought into his life during these challenging years

The sale was the piece’s first appearance at auction since 1999 when it was sold for £3.7m as part of Gianni Versace’s collection of 25 works by Picasso.

Picasso’s work sold for £18.1m at the Wednesday auction, having previously been estimated at £12m.

Other works sold for over £15m included those by Gerhard Richter, Lucian Freud, Edvard Munch, and Wassily Kandinsky.

Kandinsky’s 1910 masterpiece Murnau mit Kirche II (Murnau with Church II), was sold for £37.2m – establishing a new auction record for the Russian artist.

Painted during a transformative moment for the artist, Murnau mit Kirche II encapsulates the very beginnings of the revolutionary abstract language that later underpinned Kandinsky’s career.

Munch’s seminal four-metre-long painting, Dance on the Beach (The Reinhardt Frieze), sold for £16.9m, placing it among the top ten prices ever achieved for the artist at auction, all of which have been realised at Sotheby’s.

Lucian Simmons, vice chairman and Sotheby’s worldwide head of restitution, said: “This year marks the 25th anniversary of the conference, held in Washington DC, that first established the ground rules for the restitution of artworks looted by the Nazis during the Second World War.

“Since then, Sotheby’s restitution department has worked with many heirs and families to reunite them with their stolen property and, at the same time, to help re-tell their stories and celebrate their lives.”

Sotheby’s two sales of modern and contemporary art on Wednesday achieved a combined total of £172.6m – an increase of 15% on the auction house’s equivalent sale last June.

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