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Matisse's Reading Woman |
Matisse's
Reading Woman in White and Yellow, 1919 was painted in the South of France in the suburb of Cimiez. The 31 x 33 cm work is "oil on canvas mounted on board" and "signed lower left Henri Matisse".
Comment: Certificate of authenticity by Wanda de Guébriant, 12 Mar. 1996.
Provenance: Galerie Bernheim-Jeune, Paris, acquired from the artists on 23 June 1919, no. 21624; Bernheim-Jeune Frères, acquired on 20 May 1931; collection Josse and Gaston Bernheim-Jeune, 1931; Bignou Gallery, New York; private collection, New York, 1947; collection Dr. Peter Nathan, Zurich, 1953; collection Emil G. Bührle, Zurich, acquired from the above on 8 December 1953; Foundation Emil G. Bührle Collection, since 1960; Triton Foundation, 1999.
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Jacob Meyer De Haan, Self-Portrait |
Jacob Meyer De Haan (Amsterdam 1852 - Amsterdam 1895), Self-Portrait against Japonist Background, circa 1889-1891, oil on canvas, 32.4 x 24.5 cm. Provenance: Collection Marie Henry, Le Pouldu; collection Ida Cochennec, daughter of the artists and Marie Henry; auction Cochennec Collection, Hôtel Drouot, Paris, 24 June 1959, no. 77; Marlborough Fine Art Ltd, London; collection Mr. and Mrs Arthur G. Altschul, New York, acquired in July 1961; Triton Foundation, 2002 (on long-term loan to the Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam, 2002-2004).
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Sideways view of Monet's Waterloo Bridge |
Claude Monet:
Waterloo Bridge, London (1901), pastel on brown laid paper, signed lower right Claude Monet, 30.5 x 48.0 cm.
Provenance: Collection Werner Herold, Switzerland, circa 1917; private collection, USA, 1970; Triton Foundation, 1998.
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Another sideway's view: Monet's Charing Cross Bridge, London |
Claude Monet's
Charing Cross Bridge, London, 1901, pastel on brown gray laid paper, annotated and signed lower right
à J. Massé/au jeune chasseur/d'Afrique Claude Monet, 31.0 x 48.5 cm.
Provenance: Collection J. Massè, gift from the artist; auction Hôtel des Ventes, Enghien-Les-Bains, 24 Nov. 1985, no. 39; auction Hôtel des Ventes, Enghien-Les-Bains, 18 Mar. 1989, no. 6; private collection, Triton Foundation, 1998.
2 comments:
Impressive job! Chapeau. For your information: the value of the stolen paintings (drawings, watercolors) was grossly overestimated. The total value might be a less closer to ten million euro's instead of one hundred.
Nonsense,the Matisse and Freud alone are probably worth 40m euros.
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