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Steve Wynn sticks elbow through £74m Picasso
 Message was posted: 02:02 Oct 18th, 2006     
coolrunnings's avatar - av77.gif User: coolrunnings
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Casino news from http://www.theregister.co.uk/




A US casino mogul has blown a deal to offload a Picasso painting for £74m ($139m) after accidently sticking his elbow through it, the BBC reports.

Steve Wynn was showing off Le Reve (The Dream) to guests at his Las Vegas office last month when the expensive mishap occured. Wynn suffers from retinitis pigmentosa, "an eye disease affecting peripheral vision", the Beeb explains, and is also known for "gesturing with hands while speaking".

Eyewitness Nora Ephron later reported he "raised his hand then at that moment, his elbow crashed backward right through the canvas. There was a terrible noise".

She added: "Smack in the middle...was a black hole the size of a silver dollar. 'Look what I've done' he said. 'Thank goodness it was me'."

Wynn had agreed to sell the canvas - which he bought in 1997 for $48.4m - to collector Steven Cohen for the aforementioned truckload of cash. A spokeswoman for the gambling magnate says he'll now hold onto the painting and repair it.





Steve Wynn sticks elbow through £74m Picasso
 Message was posted: 10:13 Oct 19th, 2006     
Sandcastles's avatar - sand.gif User: Sandcastles
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Money aside, it's just really sad to have destroyed a Picasso painting. I always thought such famous paintings should hang in museums for everyone to see instead of being privately owned. I wonder what having to have it repaired will do to it's value?





Steve Wynn sticks elbow through £74m Picasso
 Message was posted: 04:07 Oct 20th, 2006     
Bernie's avatar - asa2.gif User: Bernie
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Ok, well I have to say, I agree with you but when I first read this post I couldn't stop laughing for a little bit --- until I read your post.

Sure, I'd like to see it too.





Steve Wynn sticks elbow through £74m Picasso
 Message was posted: 10:49 Nov 10th, 2006     
coolrunnings's avatar - av77.gif User: coolrunnings
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Hey Sandcastles, seems like Steve Wynn has the same kind of thinking that you do:


LAS VEGAS: Casino mogul Steve Wynn lost $139 million (€108 million) but got to keep one of his favorite paintings when he accidentally poked a hole in a Picasso last month. Now it will cost Wynn $85,000 (€66,000) to repair the damage to the art work, if not his pride.

"Forget the money," he told The Associated Press during a telephone interview Thursday from the Chinese enclave of Macau. "You hate like hell to damage a painting like 'Le Reve.'"

Wynn was showing the 1932 work by Pablo Picasso to several high-profile guests in his Las Vegas office when he accidentally poked a hole in the canvas with his elbow.

Wynn called it, "the world's clumsiest and goofiest thing to do," and said he was glad he was responsible and not one of his guests. He said no one but him said a word.

"The blood drained out of their faces," Wynn said, identifying his guests as screenwriter Nora Ephron and husband Nick Pileggi, broadcaster Barbara Walters, New York socialite Louise Grunwald, lawyer David Boies and his wife, Mary, and art dealer Serge Sorokko and his wife, Tatiana.

"They did not know what to say," Wynn recalled. "I just turned around and said, 'Oh, my God. How could I have done this?'"

"At least I did it myself."

Wynn said the gaffe made him and his wife, Elaine Wynn, reconsider his deal to sell the painting to art collector Steven Cohen. Just 36 hours before, Wynn had agreed to sell "Le Reve," French for "The Dream" for $139 million (€108 million).

Wynn's deal with Cohen would have set a record for an art sale. It would have been $4 million (€3.11 million) higher than the $135 million (€105 million) that cosmetics magnate Ronald Lauder paid in July for Gustav Klimt's 1907 portrait, "Adele Bloch-Bauer I."

The painting depicting Picasso's mistress, Marie-Therese Walter, which Wynn bought for $48.4 million (€37.62 million) in 1997, was left with what Wynn described as a thumb-sized flap in the canvas.

"Elaine said this is a sign from God that we ought to keep it," Wynn said, "and it is a favorite picture of mine." At one time he had considered naming his $2.7 billion (€2.1 billion) Wynn Las Vegas resort "Le Reve."

Wynn said it could cost $85,000 (€66,000) to repair the damage. He would not name the conservator in New York who was doing the work, but art experts say the painting can be repaired so that the tear will not be visible.

"Now the argument is over diminution of value," Wynn said.

"This is an interesting situation," Jerome Bengis, an art dealer and appraiser, said Friday from his office in Coral Springs, Florida.

"A restored piece naturally is not worth full value," said Bengis, a member of the International Society of Appraisers. "Usually when you have a unique, very expensive piece like this at this level, you value it for a percentage loss. But I doubt anyone can put a percentage on it as to what the value is."

Wynn said he had filed a loss claim with the insurer of the art work, Lloyd's of London, but declined to provide specifics.

"For insurance purposes, we're keeping our mouths shut," Wynn said.

Lloyd's spokeswoman Jennifer Culley, reached after-hours Friday in London, said she could not immediately confirm whether Lloyd's insured the painting.

Wynn said he has declined many requests to talk about the mishap up until now.

"Talking about it too much would be bad taste," Wynn said.





Steve Wynn sticks elbow through £74m Picasso
 Message was posted: 11:00 Nov 10th, 2006     
libblesp's avatar - 8.gif User: libblesp
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What a dope. That's what he gets for not letting us into his precious Vegas casino because we had *gasp* a baby in a stroller.





Steve Wynn sticks elbow through £74m Picasso
 Message was posted: 12:37 Nov 11th, 2006     
No picture uploaded User: Money Talks
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However a dopey move it might have been, from what I understand it was caused by a disease Wynn has.


Wynn suffers from retinitis pigmentosa, "an eye disease affecting peripheral vision", the Beeb explains, and is also known for "gesturing with hands while speaking".


Cheers, MT





Steve Wynn sticks elbow through £74m Picasso
 Message was posted: 11:16 Nov 11th, 2006     
pokerbaby14's avatar - onlinegamblingcasino.jpg User: pokerbaby14
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Check out the latest television talk at Media Village

I'm sorry about his disease, but he is still a dope. He said it was "the world's clumsiest and goofiest thing to do" himself.

It was a Picasso with $139 million dollars for heaven's sake! I realize it is his painting and his money to lose, but why was it not on a wall, protected by glass or something?





Steve Wynn sticks elbow through £74m Picasso
 Message was posted: 06:03 Jan 12th, 2007     
libblesp's avatar - 8.gif User: libblesp
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News source: Sun Herald: http://www.sunherald.com


Wynn sues insurers over damaged Picasso
$54 million in lost value sought
By LARRY NEUMEISTER
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK - Casino mogul Steve Wynn sued Lloyd's of London Thursday, saying the insurance company failed to act properly on his demands to pay $54 million in lost value for a Picasso that was damaged when Wynn accidentally poked a hole in the canvas with his elbow.

The lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Manhattan sought an order to force Lloyd's to expedite Wynn's claims for reimbursement and restoration costs for Picasso's 1932 work, "Le Reve," by providing him with an appraisal report or initial damages assessment.

Wynn's representatives told Lloyd's in November that the painting was worth $139 million the day before Wynn damaged it in his Las Vegas office on Sept. 30, but was believed to be worth no more than $85 million afterward.

In 1997, Wynn paid $48.4 million for the painting depicting Picasso's mistress, Marie-Therese Walter.

Wynn has described the damage to the canvas as a thumb-sized flap and said it was "the world's clumsiest and goofiest thing to do."

He damaged the canvas as he showed it to guests, including screenwriter Nora Ephron and husband Nick Pileggi, broadcaster Barbara Walters, New York socialite Louise Grunwald, lawyer David Boies and his wife, Mary, and art dealer Serge Sorokko and his wife, Tatiana.

"The blood drained out of their faces," Wynn said. "I just turned around and said, 'Oh, my God. How could I have done this?"'

In a letter included as an exhibit with the lawsuit, a Lloyd's representative wrote that he understood that Wynn's representatives wanted the insurers to estimate the level of depreciation at the outset, but that it was customary practice for the insured to make a claim first and for insurers to agree or disagree.

Lloyd's has already agreed to pay $90,000 to restore the painting, a consultant fee of $21,000 related to the restoration and increased security that was required during the process.





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