sa_butta
06-30-2005, 11:45 AM
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http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_1446436.html?menu= http://www.ananova.com/images/blank.gif£50 picture saves the day
A Californian man who fled his wrecked home with nothing but a 50 picture has found it's a £300,000 masterpiece.
Albert Trevino, 74, would have been left with nothing as insurers refused to pay up after a landslide wrecked his home in Bluebird Canyon.
He was given 15 minutes to gather his belongings before his house slipped 40ft down a hillside, reports the Mirror.
All Albert could salvage was his passport, some documents and his mother's favourite picture - a painting he bought from a garage sale for £50 more than 25 years ago.
Called Evening Shadows it shows the mission of San Juan Capistrano and was painted in 1923 by Joseph Kleitsch, a key member of the California Impressionism movement
Its identity was only revealed after Albert's artist friend Pam Hagen saw a signature on the work.
Now a gallery has agreed to sell it for Albert and wife Dolores, 69, commission-free.
He said: "When the emergency services came they would not let us back in our homes without supervision. I got the painting because it was in the room it was safest to go into."
Art expert Ray Redfern said: "A Kleitsch sold recently for more than £200,000. This one will go for more."
http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_1446436.html?menu= http://www.ananova.com/images/blank.gif£50 picture saves the day
A Californian man who fled his wrecked home with nothing but a 50 picture has found it's a £300,000 masterpiece.
Albert Trevino, 74, would have been left with nothing as insurers refused to pay up after a landslide wrecked his home in Bluebird Canyon.
He was given 15 minutes to gather his belongings before his house slipped 40ft down a hillside, reports the Mirror.
All Albert could salvage was his passport, some documents and his mother's favourite picture - a painting he bought from a garage sale for £50 more than 25 years ago.
Called Evening Shadows it shows the mission of San Juan Capistrano and was painted in 1923 by Joseph Kleitsch, a key member of the California Impressionism movement
Its identity was only revealed after Albert's artist friend Pam Hagen saw a signature on the work.
Now a gallery has agreed to sell it for Albert and wife Dolores, 69, commission-free.
He said: "When the emergency services came they would not let us back in our homes without supervision. I got the painting because it was in the room it was safest to go into."
Art expert Ray Redfern said: "A Kleitsch sold recently for more than £200,000. This one will go for more."