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Wynn accidentally damages Picasso
Las Vegas Review-Journal ^ | 10/17/06

Posted on 10/17/2006 9:01:12 PM PDT by verum ago

Pablo Picasso's "dream" painting has turned into a $139 million nightmare for Steve Wynn.

In an accident witnessed by a group that included Barbara Walters and screenwriters Nora Ephron and Nicholas Pileggi, Wynn accidentally poked a hole in Picasso's 74-year-old painting, "Le Reve," French for "The Dream."

A day earlier, Wynn had finalized a record $139 million deal for the painting of Picasso's mistress, Wynn told The New Yorker magazine

The accident occurred as a gesturing Wynn, who suffers from retinitis pigmentosa, an eye disease that affects peripheral vision, struck the painting with his right elbow, leaving a hole the size of a silver dollar in the left forearm of Marie-Theresa Walter, Picasso's 21-year-old mistress.

"Oh shit, look what I've done," Wynn said, according to Ephron, who gave her account in a blog published on Monday.

Wynn paid $48.4 million for the Picasso in 1997 and had agreed to sell it to art collector Steven Cohen. The $139 million would have been $4 million higher than the previous high for a work of art, according to The New Yorker.

Cosmetics magnate Ronald Lauder paid $135 million in July for Gustav Klimt's 1907 portrait "Adele Bloch-Bauer I."

Wynn plans to restore "Le Reve" and keep it.


TOPICS: Extended News; Miscellaneous; Unclassified
KEYWORDS: accidentshappen; lareve; oops; picasso; picassoholepoking; wynn
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To: FrPR

I like only a small handful of Picasso's works. I agree with you that he was mostly just a huge self-marketer in his later days. He is the equivalent of today's Thomas Kinkade - another artist whose "works of art" I absolutely cannot tolerate to even glance at.


81 posted on 10/18/2006 6:02:23 AM PDT by CT-Freeper (Said the perpetually dejected Mets fan.)
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To: verum ago
I don't understand this. He is an old man and he hit it with his elbow and knocked a hole in it? It must have been very fragile. Oil paintings on canvas should not be THAT fragile. Maybe they mean that the paint cracked and came OFF the canvas. If that is what happened, he had let his painting deteriorate to a terrible degree.
82 posted on 10/18/2006 6:08:29 AM PDT by Ditter
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To: Global2010

And she also has six fingers on one of her hands . . .


83 posted on 10/18/2006 6:19:00 AM PDT by Cap Huff
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To: Proud2BeRight
A Russell or Remmington is art to me.

You call that art?? Get outta here with that pretentious artsy-fartsy highfalutin' stuff. That's not art. THIS is art:


84 posted on 10/18/2006 6:25:09 AM PDT by King of Florida (A little government and a little luck are necessary in life, but only a fool trusts either of them.)
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To: King of Florida

LOL


85 posted on 10/18/2006 6:30:02 AM PDT by Proud2BeRight
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To: Atlantian

That would be the Gilcrease Museum, and yes it is worth a trip to Tulsa.


86 posted on 10/18/2006 6:31:33 AM PDT by OKSooner
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To: verum ago

Now that I've seen a picture of the "art," I would agree with others that Wynn certainly made an improvement. Somebody should pay him $139 million to burn it. It is a monstrosity and an offense to the eyes.


87 posted on 10/18/2006 6:39:38 AM PDT by Moonman62 (The issue of whether cheap labor makes America great should have been settled by the Civil War.)
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To: Bonaparte
" Are there actually two women in this painting? Or is there just one who is perhaps a little too enamored of herself?"

I showed the picture to my girlfriend this morning to see what she saw in the painting.

She saw what I did, but only after I pointed it out. Her first thought was that it is definitely two women in the picture and one of them is half male. The difference in the breasts, the hands and arms.

Now if it is supposed to represent two persons and one is male, or part male, perhaps what I saw was something the artist intended to be seen?
88 posted on 10/18/2006 6:59:58 AM PDT by Beagle8U (Demonrats want the Gays out of Congress.....stand back and let them purge their base.)
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To: FrPR

... and I don't have a problem with that shameless self marketing. Better to make a buck while you are still alive than after the worms are done with ya.

Always felt that Picasso's work bounced around in quality. I can appreciate works like the Accordionist where their was depth to the piece, but when he reduced the cubism to two dimensions it started looking like the work of a 5 year old. When someone buys a work like Dream, they are buying a brand name. No one can convince me that it represents the best of cubism, so why pay the price ?


89 posted on 10/18/2006 12:01:22 PM PDT by stacytec (Nihilism, its whats for dinner)
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To: muawiyah
You're into nekkid chick paintings aren't you?

Bouguereau's nudes are okay, but I prefer paintings like his Petites Maraudeuses--1872, Au Bord du Ruisseau--1875, Petite boudeuse-1888, Calinerie-1890>Le Goûter--1895, and some others showing clothed people.

Not that I'm opposed to 'nekkid chick paintings'--Bouguereau's Le Printemps--1886 (obvious homage to Botticelli) is very nice, for example. For the most part, though, I think his non-nudes are more to my artistic taste.

90 posted on 10/18/2006 4:20:08 PM PDT by supercat (Sony delenda est.)
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To: supercat
The way you get detail like that is to use a pinhole lens.

Not sure I count that as art ~ more on the order of colorizing a photograph.

We caught a painting where Van Gogh had done that for part of the work. As I recall it's one of his early paintings of a beachfront home ~ may be in the Getty in LA or Carnegie-Mellon in Pittsburgh (we visited both within days of each other).

It was all pretty obvious to the discerning eye. Obviously someone had been beating on Van Gogh's head to "do something realistic and detailed", so he did.

My favorite Picasso paintings and drawings are available at:

http://picasso.tamu.edu/picasso/

91 posted on 10/18/2006 4:35:46 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: beyond the sea

You must be thinking of the stuff hanging in MOCA in Los Angeles.


92 posted on 10/18/2006 4:42:34 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: GadareneDemoniac
"So...

we can deduce from the portrait that Picasso's girlfriend was obese, slept a lot, and had some sort of problem with her neck vertebrae."

Picasso had 6 major "loves" and many minor ones -- also a gay relationship with Max Jacob. It is said when Picasso was in love with a current mistress, he would pleasantly paint her -- but a mistress always knew when she lost favor for his paintings of her would become fat and ugly. The arrogant Picasso said, “When I was a child my mother said to me, ‘If you become a soldier, you'll be a general; if you become a monk, you'll end up as the pope.’ Instead I became a painter and wound up as Picasso.”

93 posted on 10/18/2006 5:02:16 PM PDT by EverOnward
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To: CT-Freeper
"He is the equivalent of today's Thomas Kinkade..."

! LOL

94 posted on 10/18/2006 5:13:13 PM PDT by Sam Cree (Don't mix alcopops and ufo's)
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To: muawiyah
The way you get detail like that is to use a pinhole lens.

Ah, the Hockney theory. Although I wouldn't doubt that the understanding of optical principles may have improved people's refinement of perspective, the camera obscura was never a practical aid for drawing or painting, even when one used a lens (without a lens it would be totally useless). There are plenty of artists today who can draw and paint without using such devices; I don't see why Bourguereau should have been any less capable.

Even though it's possible to photographically print an image onto canvas and then trace over it, which would be a huge step above using a camera obscura, paintings made by such methods generally look horrible. There is no way that a painting produced using a camera obscura would look any better. Indeed, given the practical difficulties of using such a device, it would be impossible to make even a decent trace-painted rendering of anything but the most hard-edged, motionless objects.

If I may offer an analogy, while traditional animators have often used motion-picture film enlargements for design reference, good animators basically never trace it directly. Rotoscoped animation tends to look rather flat, dull, and lifeless compared with animation drawn freehand. Even though rotoscoped animation might be "technically" more accurate, from an aesthetic standpoint it is vastly inferior.

Some people claim the quality of Bouguereau's works proves he must have used a camera obscura. I would claim that, to the contrary, it proves that he did not.

95 posted on 10/18/2006 5:30:57 PM PDT by supercat (Sony delenda est.)
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To: supercat
Actually, there are not "plenty of painters" who can do that sort of detail in that way and there never were ~ painting and drawing at that degree begins simultaneously with the knowledge of the 2X lens, and in the same places!

Human beings, of course, have tremendous accuity, but they do not and never did have the accuity of an eagle, and it takes an "eagle eye" (in the form of a 2X or greater lens) to give it to you on a two-dimensional surface.

Almost every experienced artist on Earth can differentate between detail paintings that required the use of a prosthetic and those that didn't. So can you.

96 posted on 10/18/2006 5:36:28 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah
Actually, there are not "plenty of painters" who can do that sort of detail in that way and there never were...

Plenty in this case meaning enough to demonstrate that freehand drawing and painting are skills that can be taught, at least given a suitably talented and motivated student.

Human beings, of course, have tremendous accuity, but they do not and never did have the accuity of an eagle, and it takes an "eagle eye" (in the form of a 2X or greater lens) to give it to you on a two-dimensional surface.

You assume the artist is trying to trying to reproduce accurately the details of objects he has never seen except from the vantage point implied by the painting. That's absurd.

You ignore the fact that most artists have perfectly good legs, and can thus get up and examine things they need to look at closely. They also have imaginations which can make up aesthetically pleasing stuff to fill in the details they can't see.

A good artist will familiarize himself with any subject he intends to reproduce accurately. He will be able to remember what an obliquely-viewed object looked like, even if he cannot see it terribly well. And if the details as remembered don't strike his fancy, he'll supplant them with his imagination.

Almost every experienced artist on Earth can differentate between detail paintings that required the use of a prosthetic and those that didn't. So can you.

The tracing-paintings I've seen haven't impressed me. Perhaps you could point me to some better examples.

97 posted on 10/18/2006 5:51:05 PM PDT by supercat (Sony delenda est.)
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To: supercat

The trained and skilled artist can differentiate between a painting done with the eye only and one where a photograph was used to assist.


98 posted on 10/18/2006 5:54:00 PM PDT by muawiyah
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To: muawiyah
The trained and skilled artist can differentiate between a painting done with the eye only and one where a photograph was used to assist.

Given that the best artists use real models when possible, how does that fit in with your theory?

99 posted on 10/18/2006 6:14:15 PM PDT by supercat (Sony delenda est.)
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To: supercat
There are bad artists who use "real models" too. The issue is the degree of detail found in what are known as "realism".

Since the human eye cannot, unaided, see that detail and its interactions with other detail (gradations and shades) unassisted, it's really more like photography than naturalistic drawing and painting.

If you prefer that sort of thing, fine. Just don't call it "art".

100 posted on 10/18/2006 6:17:20 PM PDT by muawiyah
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