[PW] Re: First acquisiton of Picasso by the Louvre?
Bye, Dan J
D.J.Bye at shu.ac.uk
Thu Nov 30 06:29:39 PST 2006
Daphne is correct about the nature of the Louvre's collections.
http://www.louvre.fr/llv/musee/mission.jsp
"The cut-off point for the Louvre's collection is 1848".
I certainly don't see any Picassos in the Louvre's database:
http://cartelen.louvre.fr/
Dan
> -----Original Message-----
> From: project-wombat-bounces at lists.project-wombat.org
> [mailto:project-wombat-bounces at lists.project-wombat.org] On
> Behalf Of Daphne Drewello
> Sent: 29 November 2006 22:40
> To: list at project-wombat.org; John Ptak
> Subject: [PW] Re: First acquisiton of Picasso by the Louvre?
>
> John Ptak wrote
>
> > Does anyone happen to know when the Louvre acquired its
> first work by
> > Picasso?
>
> Are there any Picassos in the Louvre? I thought their
> collection only contained items through the first half of the
> 19th century. More modern stuff is in the Musee d'Orsay, I
> believe, and of course, Picasso has his own museum in Paris.
> When Picasso was given an exhibition at the Louvre in 1971,
> it was the first time the Museum had ever had an exhibition
> of the works of a living artist. I don't know if that counts.
>
> I really don't know very much about art. Obviously.
>
>
> Daphne Drewello
> Alfred Dickey Library
> Jamestown, ND
>
>
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