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Spanish court grabs prized Picasso in tug-of-love with banker

Published: 11 Aug 2015 - 10:20 pm | Last Updated: 12 Jan 2022 - 12:27 am

The painting Head of a Young Woman by Pablo Picassos that has been seized in Calvi, Corsica Island, France.

 

MADRID: A Picasso painting belonging to one of Spain’s wealthiest bankers and seized in France following an export ban was due to arrive in Madrid, a police source said.

Head of a Young Woman, painted by the Malaga-born artist in 1906 and valued at more than ¤25m (around $28m), was impounded by French customs officials last month on board a yacht in the Corsican port of Calvi.
Deemed a national treasure by Spain, whose high court slapped an export ban on it, the picture has been the subject of legal wrangling for several months.
Both painting and vessel are owned by billionaire Jaime Botin, part of the family dynasty that ran Santander for several generations and brother of the bank’s late chairman Emilio Botin.
Following an application by auctioneer Christie’s, Jaime Botin tried to export the work to London but was blocked by the court in May, a ruling his law firm said he was contesting. 
A later attempt to move it from Corsica to Switzerland prompted French customs to seize it.
The painting will be held in Madrid’s main modern art museum, the Reina Sofia, until its status is resolved, sources from the police and the museum said. It will not be on public display.
Members of Spain’s military police travelled to Corsica on Tuesday to retrieve the painting, the police source said.
Spanish cultural bodies have argued the work is a rare example of how ancient Iberian art influenced Picasso, who painted it around the time he stayed in a small mountain village in the Pyrenees.
Botin’s lawyer Rafael Mateu de Ros said in an emailed statement that the painting had been kept on a British-registered boat and should therefore not come under the jurisdiction of Spanish authorities.
“The painting was painted abroad, it was purchased abroad and it has always been kept overseas. There the painting cannot have been exported (from Spain), legally or illegally,” he said.
Arguably the most famous artist of the 20th century, Pablo Picasso spent the bulk of his long life in France, dying there in 1973.
Reuters