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Christie's cancel Miró auction contract without suing the Portuguese State

miroFortunately for the Portuguese taxpayer, the gentlemen at the British auction house, Christie’s, have agreed to cancel the contract to sell the Joan Miró collection, without requiring payment or seeking damages.

The Finance Ministry today announced that Parvalorem and Parups have reached an agreement with Christie’s to rescind the sale by auction agreement for the collection of 85 works by the Spanish painter.

The companies Parvalorem and Parups were created in 2010 by the State to manage the assets and recover money owed to the bust Banco Português de Negócios (BPN), which was nationalised in 2008 and listed the Miró collection among its assets.

The Ministry of Finance said of the news from Christie's,  that "this is another important step towards complying with the Government regarding keeping these works in Portugal.”

The revocation of the contract has been under negotiation for some time. The current government decided to keep the Miró collection in Portugal and to this end, currently it is hung in the Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art in Oporto, in an exhibition 'Joan Miró: Materiality and Metamorphosis' curated by Robert Lubar Messeri, with architectural design by Álvaro Siza Vieira - ends June 4th, 2017.

The Passos Coelho government in 2014 decided to have the collection auctioned off - and then the farce started to play out with petitions, parliamentary debates, injunctions filed (some of which are outstanding), two cancelled auctions and an overall sense that those supposedly in charge were anything but.   

Under the agreement signed between the companies representing the State and Christie’s, the collection would be sold for a minimum of €35.5 million, or a maximum of €54.3 million. A direct offer for €50 million was rejected even though a condition was that the collection went on public display.

Christie’s gave up all hope of being able to do its job, such was the legal and political storm surrounding the collection, so it ended up back in the incompetent hands of Parvalorem and Parups whose directors refused to allow the public access, ‘pending legal issues.’

One of the first things António Costa did when he took over the premiership was to stop this nonsense and agree a permanent home for the collection.

___________

See also:

Controversial Miró collection finds a home in Oporto
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4. New government wants Miró collection to stay in Portugal
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6. State companies fined for Miró fiasco
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7. Miró auction deal surrounded by suspicion
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Details of the contract between state controlled Parvalorem and Christie's covering the forthcoming auction in London of 85 Miró works have not been disclosed "because the auction house does not want any ...
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8. On/Off Miró auction back on
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...    Christie's said on Thursday that the sale of 85 works by Spanish artist Joan Miró will be rescheduled for June but declined to give more details on the date, or the decision to finally sell t ...
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9. Miró sale ditched by Christie’s
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...  limited companies wholly publicly owned, namely the Parvalorem, SA Parups and not the state.” The 85 works of art by the Spanish painter Joan Miró have been held by the Portuguese State since the emergenc ...
Created on 04 February 2014
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