Picasso's Granddaughter Sells 7 Works: "He Was Cruel, I Want to Forget – Venderequadri Skip to content
Picasso: la nipote vende 7 opere  «Era crudele, voglio dimenticarlo»

Picasso's Granddaughter Sells 7 Works: "He Was Cruel, I Want to Forget Him"

Marina has decided to get rid of it for the modest sum of 241 million Euros In the background, a very difficult family history, between Pablo's absence and his suicidal brother Bearing that surname must not be easy, if that surname is undisputedly synonymous with contemporary art: but that is not the reason why Marina Picasso, Pablo's granddaughter and sole heir, struggles to live with the memory of her celebrated grandfather. 241 million euros No, the reason she decided to sell seven of the 400 Picasso works she owns, as well as the La Californie residence, where the painter lived with his second wife, Jacqueline Roque, is to distance herself from a painful past, from a man who "drove everyone around him to despair," as she has repeatedly said. Some gossips might argue that these sales are actually driven by far more venal impulses: for example, the 1909 "Woman with a Mandolin" is worth 50 million euros, while the 1921-22 "Maternity" is worth 45 million. Interesting figures. The paintings will be sold at an auction house in Geneva. «Grand Pere» But the 64-year-old granddaughter, as she wrote in 2001 in a biographical volume simply titled "Grand Pere" (Grandfather), actually has her fair share of reasons to detest the man so many revered: daughter of Paulo, son of his first wife, the Russian ballerina Olga Khokhlova, and sister of Pablito, she was never accepted by the egocentric, cold, and detached painter. He never welcomed his grandchildren into his other house in Mougins, grandchildren of whom he didn't even own a photograph, placing between himself and them the terrible Jacqueline, a priestess of the Picasso cult who would reply to the little ones: "Your Highness isn't here" or "The sun is resting." She didn't even allow the children to attend the painter's funeral in 1973. His brother died from it An emotional bombshell that would have destroyed anyone. While Marina survived, so to speak, by suffering from anorexia, her brother did not: ingesting liters of bleach "to erase the weight of this inheritance," he died two months after Picasso's passing. A terrible family affair, therefore: this is also why Marine did not attend the celebrations marking the fortieth anniversary of the painter's death in 2013. "I don't feel particularly emotional," she said at the time. "The further I distance myself from what I experienced as a young man, the happier I am." And indeed, if you look closely, these are wounds that no million-dollar auction can heal.
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