Femme Assise (1909), one of Picasso's earliest Cubist paintings, sold for 43.2 million pounds (USD 63.4 million) at a Sotheby's London auction yesterday.
Described by Sotheby's as "the greatest Cubist painting to come to the market in decades," it has broken the record for the highest price for a Cubist work at any auction.
Experts say it depicts Picasso's lover and frequent model Fernande Olivier.
"The vast, vast, vast majority of the works of the Cubist period of this importance went into museums of the world many years ago because Picasso's Cubism has for many decades been considered one of the most important, groundbreaking periods -- not just for him, but for the whole of what was to come in terms of modern art."
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Cubism, which sees subjects broken down into geometric shapes and reassembled in an abstract way, is considered one of the most revolutionary movements in contemporary art. Taking root in the early 20th century, it is considered a precursor for contemporary abstract art.
Although this is not as high as the price of Picasso's record-setting Femmes d'Alger, which sold for USD 149 million in 2015, it has not only claimed the title for highest price for any Cubist work at auction, but also the highest price for a painting sold in London since 2010, when Alberto Giacometti's Walking Man I sold for 65 million pounds (USD 95 million.)
"There hasn't been a painting of this importance at auction in potentially a generation," Newman says.
Picasso was a Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist, poet and playwright who spent most of his adult life in France. He died in 1973 aged 91.