Delacroix’s Les Femmes d’Alger.
Qui est la femme?
Picasso’s mistress Jacqueline Roque is widely believed to be the archetype for the woman looking out from the canvas.
The Creation
From the series’ start to the gallery’s wall.
December 13, 1954: Picasso begins the series, 40 days after Matisse passes away.
December 31, 1954: The artist has completed two canvases and a drawing.
January 31, 1955: Ten canvases are completed.
February 6, 1955: The 11th of 15 is finished.
February 9, 1955: The 12th is done.
February 14, 1955: On Valentine’s Day, Picasso completes Les Femmes d’Alger (Version “O”). He keeps the painting for a few days before giving it to his dealer, Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler.
The Owners
Everyone who has bought Version “O.”
On Display: The painting’s first move into private hands.
Kahnweiler was a friend of Picasso’s whose Galerie Kahnweiler (renamed Galerie Louise Leiris in 1940) was responsible for selling works by the likes of Braque, Léger, and Gris as well as Picasso. In 1955, though, Picasso was not selling particularly well. It took a 1960 retrospective at the Tate in London to send his prices skyrocketing — even then, the most expensive works would go for $50,000, or about $400,000 in today’s dollars.
The Ganzes: Owners from 1956 to 1997
Victor and Sally Ganz were a low-key Manhattan couple who accumulated one of the country’s best collections of 20th-century art. One day in the 1950s, Victor, who owned a costume-jewelry company, and Sally — a perfume seller at Bonwit Teller — popped into the Paul Rosenberg Gallery on 57th Street and saw a Picasso called The Dream. They loved it and bought it for $7,000. In June 1956, Kahnweiler came to them with a deal: the entire Les Femmes d’Alger series for $212,500.
The Anonymous Second Buyer: Owner from 1997 to 2015.
After 50 years of collecting and a decade after the death of her husband, Sally Ganz decided to sell off part of her collection at Christie’s. The Dream was the 1997 event’s biggest single sale, going for $48.4 million. Not far behind was Les Femmes d’Alger (Version “O”), which went for $31.9 million to London-based dealer Libby Howie. But she wasn’t buying for herself — the actual purchaser remained anonymous. The Independent speculated that “Howie is believed to act as agent for a Middle Eastern potentate.”
The Record Sale
List price: $140 million.
Other Things Al Thani Has Bought in New York:
$90 million: The East 64th Street Wildenstein & Company headquarters (sale pending)
$47 million: An Upper East Side townhouse
$35 million: A mansion at 21 Beekman Place
Is It Worth the Price?
Artistically speaking, that is.
Whether any piece of art is “worth” such an exorbitant price is a question primarily for economists, but what about the painting’s quality? Of the 15 canvases, Version “O” is the most fully realized of the series, and certainly the most desirable Picasso canvas not in a public collection or, prior to its sale, already stashed away in a billionaire’s vault. Loic Gouzer, the Christie’s director who curated the special auction that featured the sale, says that “Les Femmes d’Alger is one of those effortless masterpieces that Picasso did in the second part of his career.” But Picasso’s friend and biographer John Richardson doesn’t place it “in the first 100 of Picasso’s best paintings.”
*This article appears in the July 13, 2015 issue of New York Magazine.
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