Picasso, raffle
Digest more
Ari Hodara was the lucky winner of the “1 Picasso for 100 euros” raffle, which offered entrants the chance to take home Picasso’s 1941 gouache “Tête de Femme.” The price of a ticket was — as the name of the contest suggests — 100 euros, or about $117.
A t the heart of the Reina Sofía national museum in Madrid is the huge canvas of Pablo Picasso’s “Guernica”, with its anguished faces and contorted bodies: an icon of 20th-
A Parisian software salesman entered a charity raffle and came away with a piece of history: “I have some paintings, but not like a Picasso.”
Pablo Picasso’s quote highlights that true purpose lies in discovering your talent and sharing it with others, showing that real fulfilment comes from contribution, not just success.
A painting by Pablo Picasso, valued at over a million dollars, was sold for the price of 100 euros. The reason? Ari Hodara was the lucky winner of the '1 Picasso for 100 Euros' lottery,
Malaysia's anti-graft agency said on Tuesday it had successfully repatriated four high-value pieces of artwork, including a 1961 Pablo Picasso print, recovered in
Most people buy raffle tickets and win a toaster, maybe a gift hamper if lucky. But, in Paris, 59-year-old software engineer Ari Hodara bought one—and walked away with a €1 million (approx Rs10.8 Crore) Picasso.