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Press release
7 March 2011
Important Picasso painting exhibited in the UK for the first time
The most expensive painting to be sold at auction Nude, Green Leaves and Bust 1932 by Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) goes on public display for the first time ever in the UK at Tate Modern today. The work
has been lent to Tate from a Private Collection and will be on display in a new Pablo Picasso room in the Poetry and Dream
wing on Level 3.
Nicholas Serota, Director, Tate said: “This is an outstanding painting by Picasso and I am delighted that through the generosity
of the lender we are able to bring it to the British public for the first time. Nude, Green Leaves and Bust is one of the sequence of paintings of Picasso’s muse, Marie-Thérèse Walter, made by the artist at Boisgeloup, Normandy,
in the early months of 1932. They are widely regarded as amongst his greatest achievements of the inter-war period.”
Picasso first encountered Marie-Thérèse Walter in January 1927 but their relationship had to remain secret from his wife,
Olga. It was only in 1931-2 that he began to make sculptures and paintings in which the manipulation of Walter’s body was
explicit, complex and highly eroticised. Although Picasso had long disguised his affair with Marie-Thérèse Walter, Nude, Green Leaves and Bust is among the group of works which openly chart the obsessiveness between the lovers. It was painted on 8 March 1932 and is
the most intense among the group of large nudes completed in single, sometimes consecutive, days and marking a high-point
of Picasso’s creative energy. The setting (probably in the sculpture studios of the Château de Boisgeloup outside Paris) includes
a secretive curtain that provides the screen onto which the sculptural bust casts a double shadow. It is as if the white of
the foreground nude was, literally as well as metaphorically, illuminating the space.
After many years in private hands, Nude, Green Leaves and Bust was sold at Christie’s, New York on 4 May 2010 to a private collector for a world record price of $106.5m. Before it was
sold, the work had been in the collection of LA based collectors Sidney and Frances Brody for almost six decades. They had
acquired the work in 1951 from Paul Rosenberg & Co., Paris and New York whom in turn had acquired it from the artist in 1936.
During that period it had been exhibited publicly only once, in 1961, to commemorate Picasso’s 80th birthday.  The lender wishes to remain anonymous.
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) was born in Málaga, Spain. He spent most of his working life in Paris and the South of France. Regarded
as the forefather of the Cubist movement, Picasso’s revolutionary artistic achievements position him as one of the most important
artists in the history of Western art. Prolific and influential, he moved through different periods throughout his artistic
oeuvre; his paintings, etchings, drawings, sculptures and ceramics are deemed to personify modern art.
For further information and press releases about exhibitions, contact Helen Beeckmans/Daisy Mallabar, Tate Press Office Call
020 7887 8731/4940 Email pressoffice@tate.org.uk