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Trove of modernist art from Tehran museum may travel to the U.S.

A 2012 photo shows Habibollah Sadegh, then-director of the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, standing beside Pablo Picasso's "Portrait de Femme II" and "Jacqueline Lisant." Below, to his left, are Picasso's "La Femme Qui Pleure" and Vincent Van Gogh's "Worn Out: At Eternity's Gate."

A 2012 photo shows Habibollah Sadegh, then-director of the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, standing beside Pablo Picasso’s “Portrait de Femme II” and “Jacqueline Lisant.” Below, to his left, are Picasso’s “La Femme Qui Pleure” and Vincent Van Gogh’s “Worn Out: At Eternity’s Gate.”

(Kim Murphy / Los Angeles Times)
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A trove of modern art, some of which has been in storage since the Iranian Revolution, will emerge over the next year, when works from the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art go on exhibit in Berlin and possibly other cities.

The Tehran museum has the most valuable collection of Western modern art outside of Europe and the United States, experts say, including work by Claude Monet, Max Ernst, Mark Rothko, Pablo Picasso, Francis Bacon, Jasper Johns, Jackson Pollack and Andy Warhol.

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The news of Iran’s steps toward artistic diplomacy has trickled out over the past two months in periodicals such as Nafas Art Magazine, the Art Newspaper and Art Daily.

The museum was founded in 1977 on a modern campus in the center of Tehran under the patronage of the late Shah’s wife, Farah Pahlavi, who lives in Paris and the U.S.

A selection of work from the Tehran museum will be shown for three months at the National Gallery of Berlin alongside major works of modern Iranian art by artists such as Sohrab Sepehri, Mansour Ghandriz and Faramarz Pilaram.

There are also reports that institutions in the United States have expressed interest in borrowing from the Tehran museum’s collection, with the Art Newspaper reporting that the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C., has had early discussions with the Tehran museum. A Hirshhorn spokesperson told Culture Monster that she was unable to comment.

Whether or not items from the collection find their way to Los Angeles remains to be seen. A spokesperson for the Getty Museum said it has no plans regarding the collection at the moment. A spokesperson from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art said the museum can’t confirm anything at this time.

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