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    The Art of Rips, Tears and Repairs

    Damage to a Picasso is just the latest museum-goer accident

    The Metropolitan Museum of Art's Picasso painting "The Actor," which suffered damage last Friday, wasn't the first valuable piece of artwork harmed accidentally by a museum-goer or owner. Kids, dogs and adults who lost their balance have left their mark in recent years.

    The Met painting was torn when a woman attending an adult-education class lost her balance and fell onto the large canvas. The New York museum is assessing a 6-inch tear, and the museum has said it should be repaired in time for a big Picasso show in April. (Though the Met won't confirm the value of the Picasso, or any of its art, some reports have valued "The Actor" at well over $100 million.)

    Ob-fk035_damage_cv_20100128181
    Falling for Noguchi

    In 2004, the Noguchi Museum in Queens lent a bronze sculpture to an exhibition hall in Sapporo, Japan, for a show of Noguchi's photos, drawings and sculptures. A museum patron wasn't feeling well and lost her balance, falling on the bronze sculpture, "Wakai-Hito," which she knocked over and damaged. The sculpture was on loan from a private collector, says Amy Hau, the museum's administrative director: "Accidents happen." Ms. Hau declined to estimate the price of the work but said it was of "significant value." It has since been fixed.

    Wynn's Errant Elbow

    Wk-as685_damage_d_201001281141
    In 2006, casino mogul Steve Wynn was showing off his famous Picasso painting, "Le RĂªve," to friends when he accidentally poked a hole in the painting with his elbow. It was a costly mistake: He was just about to sell the piece to hedge-funder and art collector Steven Cohen for $139 million. The 6-inch rip in the canvas was eventually repaired, but the sale was called off.

    Renaissance Crash

    The Met had another recent accident: In 2008 a 15th-century terra-cotta relief sculpture by Italian artist Andrea della Robbia came loose from its wall mounts and fell onto a stone floor. It was damaged in the fall and is still undergoing repairs. The museum won't say how much the sculpture was worth, but in 2004 a terra-cotta relief sculpture by the artist sold for $206,000 at auction in Venice.

    Wk-as690_damage_d_201001281139

    Climbing the 'Standing Woman'

    The galleries of the Milwaukee Art Museum were the venue for a "Martinifest" in 2006, which included all-you-can-drink martinis for $30. Drunken revelers climbed, groped and vomited on a 7-foot-tall, bronze cast sculpture of a voluptuous female called "Standing Woman" by Gaston Lachaise. In December, an 18-inch bronze sculpture by the artist sold for $278,500 at auction.




    From WSJ:

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704094304575029610052908770.html


    • 30 January 2010
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