1. Picasso Drawings Valued at $9.8 Million to $14 Million Stolen from The Museu Picasso

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    artwork: Pablo Picasso and Jaume Sabartés - Château Grimaldi, Antibes, 1946 - Photo acquired by the Museu Picasso de Barcelona in 2008, Jaume Sabartés as a faun playing the recorder, 1946, can be seen in the lower centre - Michel Sima / Rue des Archives

    PARIS - A Pablo Picasso sketchbook worth more than €8m (£6.9m) has been stolen from a Paris museum dedicated to the artist, where it is believed to have been kept in an unlocked cabinet. Detectives began an investigation after the notebook, containing 32 drawings by the Spanish artist, was reported missing today from the Picasso Museum in the Marais district. It is thought to have been taken between Monday night and morning. The red sketchbook of pencil ­drawings is dated between 1917 and 1924 and contains drawings from Barcelona, Paris and Picasso's travels in France. It is believed to have been on display on the first floor in an unlocked exhibition case without an alarm.

    The museum is staging a vast temporary installation that takes up much exhibition space, which could have made it easier for the theft to take place out of sight of guards. French national museums are normally closed on Tuesday but the museum was open today for local residents of to attend a special viewing by invitation only.

    Museum workers discovered the theft when they were making an inventory. The sketchbook was seen Monday in the glass case in which it is displayed but on Tuesday it was not there, police said. The glass display case was locked but no specific tool was required to open it, the Culture Ministry said.

    artwork: Picasso's La Danse sur la plage, part of his exhibition at the Musée Picasso in Antibes. Photograph: Succession Picasso 2009 (Note :This Picasso Drawing Was Not Stolen)The theft is the latest in a line of Picasso heists in France in recent decades.

    Picasso is the most stolen artist in the world because of his prolific output, recognizable signature and valuable works. There are more than 500 missing Picassos on the London-based Art Loss Register of stolen art.

    The Picasso Museum houses the world's largest collection of his work, ranging from paintings and ceramics to sketchbooks, handed to the French state by relatives in lieu of taxes after his death. The museum has about 1,500 Picasso drawings, many in sketchbooks.

    Two years ago, two Picasso paintings, together worth €50m, were stolen from the Paris home of the artist's granddaughter, Diana Widmaier.

    The works, Maya and the Doll and ­Portrait of Jacqueline ­disappeared mysteriously at night but there was no sign of a break-in.The painting of his daughter, Maya, was done in 1938 and shows the 3-year-old girl in a blue dress holding a doll. The only information released about the portrait of Jacqueline was the dimensions. Twelve Picasso paintings valued at around $17 million dollars, were stolen from the French Riviera villa of another of his grandchildren, Marina Picasso, in 1989.

    Several other Picasso paintings have been stolen from galleries across the world including one of France's largest ever art robberies in 1976, when 118 works were stolen from a museum in the southern city of Avignon. In 1997, a gunman walked into a central London art gallery, ripped Picasso's Tete de Femme, worth more than $1m, from the wall and fled in a taxi. The work was later recovered.

    The Picasso Museum in Paris' old Marais neighborhood is dedicated to the Spanish-born painter, a founder of the Cubist movement and leading 20th-century artist.




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