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MALEVICH MASTERPIECE TO BE SOLD IN NEW YORK
01 April 2000


Cet article se compose de 2 pages.
1 2
Malevich's dearest wish was to exhibit his paintings in Paris but travelled out of the USSR only once in 1927 to show some 70 works in Berlin. feeling that future problems with the Stalinist regime, which considered his works as subversive, the artist handed over his paintings and writings to some friends in Berlin before going back to Moscow.

His friends preserved his works, first from the Nazis and then during the war when Berlin was bombed. Malevich's large paintings were however destroyed while several small works were found intact in a Bavarian house destroyed by a bomb. Other works had been hidden in the reserve rooms of the Hanover Museum where the envoy of the Museum of Modern Art in New York shipped them to the U.S after Germany's defeat.

Una, the heir of Malevich, and the daughter he had from his second marriage were happy to think that his works were kept in the West despite pressures from the Russian government. A German lawyer eventually traced back Galina, the daughter Malevich had during his first marriage and in all 31 heirs who claimed that the MoMA had no right to keep his works.

The MoMA was thus forced to reach an agreement with these heirs and concluded a $ 5 million transaction in order to keep these works excepted the one to be sold by Phillips.

The proceeds will go to the heirs of Malevich who are all known to live in poverty. Now the question remains as to how much the painting will fetch. Phillips' has give a $ 8 to 10 million estimate before revising it at $ 20 million, a price similar to that paid in private for another work by Malevich. The art market won't have to wait long regarding the final bid due to fall soon.

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