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A 1968 work by late Spanish artist Pablo Picasso entitled ‘Buste de mousquetaire’ at the Museum of Contemporary Art (MAMCO) in Geneva on Friday. Photo: AFP 

Picasso painting bought by 25,000 people as a group from a Swiss bargain site

Swiss bargain site Qoqa sold shares for the Picasso painting at about US$51 each; the main objective was ‘to go viral’, says the company founder

Art

It will not hang on the wall in their living rooms, but they own it nonetheless: 25,000 internet users banded together to buy a Picasso painting, which went on display in Geneva on Friday.

Visitors to Swiss bargain site Qoqa usually end up buying a new drill, a luggage set or a cheap trip to Marrakesh.

But last December, the website created in 2005 with the motto: “We do anything, but it’s all for you,” proposed a painting by artist superstar Pablo Picasso. 

The 1968 painting titled Buste de mousquetaire (Musketeer Bust) was offered up at the bargain price of two million Swiss francs (US$2 million).

Over the course of three days, 25,000 people bought 40,000 shares, at a price of 50 Swiss francs each (about US$51), to become the proud owners of the artwork.

A visitor looks at Pablo Picasso’s ‘Buste de mousquetaire’ at the Museum of Contemprary Art (MAMCO) in Geneva on Friday. Photo: AFP 

Qoqa’s main objective with selling a work by arguably the most famous artist of the 20th century was obviously “to go viral” and get people talking about the website, said company chief and founder Pascal Meyer.

But standing in the middle of the site’s open workspace, with its young, hip staff bent over laptops, the 37-year-old stressed the move had also been inspired by a desire to democratise the art world, which he said was often viewed as “closed and obscure”.

“When we launched this idea, people told us to forget it, that it was just impossible,” said Meyer, who like the rest of Qoqa’s workforce adheres to a no-tie policy.

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“And then when we started talking about Picasso, people said, ‘now that is doubly impossible’. So the challenge was irresistible,” he enthused.

“We said: Let’s do this thing. Let’s try … to democratise this area, which seems so inaccessible to regular people.”

The company gathered a team of specialists to certify the authenticity of the painting, but also to ensure that the price was fair.

Meyer refused to divulge how much Qoqa paid for the 58 x 28.5-centimetre painting, which portrays what looks like a man with a pointy beard and moustache, and a lacy collar.

He said only that the company bought it from a European seller who did not wish to be identified.

In the “musketeer” spirit of the painting, the owners have basically made a vow of “all for one, one for all” by pool decisions on where it will go on display.

A contributor swipes the card associated with her share of the Pablo Picasso piece entitled

Geneva’s modern art museum MAMCO was on Friday the first to receive that honour.

Director Lionel Bovier said he had been smitten by the project. For the reputedly highbrow museum, associating with the crowd sourcing scheme could serve to help broaden its appeal beyond the elitist crowd it usually attracts.

“The main interest for us is to foster a broader group of visitors …, to reach out and address this group of people who have become owners of the painting,” said Bovier.

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“We hope to draw the biggest crowd possible from this group of 25,000 people,” he said, adding that most of the buyers were from the French-speaking part of Switzerland.

Each owner has been issued his or her own card, bearing individual numbers and a picture of the painting, allowing them to come and admire it at will, for free.

Bovier said he had drawn on Qoqa’s technological know-how to display the painting in an original manner, using among other things a webcam and an interactive platform, “PiQasso”, which will be available through the Qoqa site.

The Buste de mousquetaire” is set to remain in Geneva until October. It will be up to its owners to determine where it will go next.

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