I missed this last week, but a complete set of Picasso’s silver plates was sold by Sotheby’s Hong Kong office. Here's a pre-sale
            article from the Financial Times. -Editor
           
          
          
             
          
          Over the past decade or so, Picasso’s ceramics have soared in popularity – and price – but it is less well known that he also crafted 24
          different silver plates between 1956 and 1967, each cast in a limited edition of 20. Now, for the first time, a complete set of the plates
          is being auctioned, in Sotheby’s Hong Kong’s Boundless: Contemporary Art sale on Thursday June 23, with viewing from Friday June 17
          onwards. They are estimated at HK$12m-HK$18m (about £1.09m-£1.63m). 
          Picasso began working in ceramics in 1946, after attending the annual potters’ exhibition in Vallauris, France, but it was not until a
          decade later that he commissioned the master craftsman François Hugo – Victor Hugo’s great-grandson – to cast a series of designs in
          gold and silver based on the ceramic originals. Initially they were for Picasso’s enjoyment alone, hidden from the public and shown only to
          a small circle of intimates, but in 1967 Picasso authorised Hugo and his son Pierre to make small, numbered editions of each plate. 
          Even then their existence remained largely unknown outside a small number of connoisseurs until they formed part of the centrepiece of
          the 1977 solo exhibition Picasso – 19 Silver Platters at London’s Lever Galleries and Paris’ Galerie Matignon. They caused a sensation, and
          contributed to the growing recognition of Picasso’s non-painting works. “These unique silver plates cast an intimate light on Picasso’s
          artistic production of the 1950s,” says Isaure de Viel Castel, head of Boundless sales, Sotheby’s Hong Kong. “Picasso chose not to share
          these plates with the public, reserving them exclusively for his family and friends. It’s thrilling to have the opportunity to reunite them
          as a complete group for the first time at auction. Picasso’s ceramics share a similar iconography, but by casting in silver, he references
          the grand tradition of French and Italian silverware. Three centuries on from the legendary silver furniture and silverware made for
          Versailles, Picasso breathes life into this sumptuous French tradition.” 
          The designs are inspired by three themes: Henri Matisse, bullfights and his second wife Jacqueline Roque. The influence of Matisse
          shines through in the design Visage aux Feuilles, a whimsical face surrounded by simple lines in a manner reminiscent of Matisse’s later
          drawings and cutouts; the bull, a frequent preoccupation of Picasso, features in the design Taureau; and Roque, his muse at the time,
          appears in the design Profil de Jacqueline. 
          To read the complete article, see:
           
          Bid for a full set of Picasso’s 24 silver
          plates (http://howtospendit.ft.com/art/108443-bid-for-a-full-set-of-picassos-24-silver-plates) 
          
          
            Accordnig to this Art Daily article, The lot was sold to a Japanese private collector for HK$19.88 million / US$2.5 million.
            -Editor
           
          To read the complete article, see:
           
          
          http://artdaily.com/news/86864/A-complete-set-of-24-Picasso-silver-plates-to-lead-Sotheby-s-HK-s--Boundless--Contemporaty-Art-Sale-#.V3EZUbgrLNM
          (http://artdaily.com/news/86864/A-complete-set-of-24-Picasso-silver-plates-to-lead-Sotheby-s-HK-s--Boundless--Contemporaty-Art-Sale-#.V3EZUbgrLNM) 
          
          
            E-Sylum readers learned about these Picasso items in 2014, thanks for Dick Johnson and Ron Haller-Williams. -Editor
           
          To read the earlier E-Sylum articles, see:
           
          SOME RECENT AUCTION ITEMS: INDIAN PEACE AND PICASSO MEDALS
          (www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v17n51a13.html)
           
          MORE ON THE PABLO PICASSO SILVER AND GOLD MEDALS
          (www.coinbooks.org/esylum_v17n52a12.html) 
          
  
Wayne Homren, Editor
  
 
The Numismatic Bibliomania Society is a non-profit organization 
promoting numismatic literature. See our web site at coinbooks.org.
  
To submit items for publication in The E-Sylum, write to the Editor 
at this address: whomren@gmail.com
  
To subscribe go to: https://my.binhost.com/lists/listinfo/esylum
Copyright © 1998 - 2024 The Numismatic Bibliomania Society (NBS)
 
All Rights Reserved. 
 NBS Home Page
 Contact the NBS webmaster
	  
	 
				
	  
  
 |