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"One day he took me by the arm and said 'take your time to chose what you want. I will let you know then what I am willing to let go,'" Beyeler said, recounting for the Swiss weekly Schweizer Illustrierte how Picasso lent him 46 works for his Basel gallery in 1966. "Among these were some great paintings," Beyeler said, adding that he acquired 26 of them in all. They included the masterpiece "Woman" that he forever kept. In 1981 the Beyeler Gallery organized a comprehensive retrospective to mark the centenary of Picasso's birth. Beyeler also spearheaded successful exhibitions at the Basel art museum, becoming the most influential patron in Switzerland. In 1971 he was a founder of Basel's renowned international art fair that continues today as one of the world's biggest draws for contemporary works. After adding some 100 oil paintings, watercolors and drawings by Kandinsky to his collection in the 1970s, Beyeler created a foundation in 1982 together with his wife. He presented the collection of around 200 works of modern classics in Madrid, Berlin and Sydney, but then decided to build his own museum and enlisted star architect Renzo Piano. The Beyeler Foundation opened its doors in 1997, presenting 140 works of modern classics, including 23 Picassos. A masterpiece of contemporary architecture, the museum is airy and affected by the soft colors, large windows and outdoor park with two ponds that create different shades of light and color as they reflect on artworks consciously placed on the walls of different rooms. "I have always perceived works of art as parables of creation -- 'analogous to nature' as Cezanne once said
-- as an expression of joie de vivre," Beyeler said at the museum's unveiling. He continued to visit the museum and attend its special exhibitions of artists such as Cezanne, Monet, Andy Warhol and Mark Rothko. The culmination of his career came in 2007 when all the works that passed through his hands were reunited at the museum for a grand exhibition that included van Gogh's 1889 "Portrait of Postman Roulin," Roy Lichtenstein's "Plus and Minus III" and a huge expressive drip painting by Jackson Pollock. Increasingly frail but remaining energetic, Beyeler was seen by an Associated Press reporter in 2009 chatting with business partners in the museum's cafeteria. In his last years, he set up a foundation to direct part of the gains of his museum to protecting tropical forests. Funeral arrangements were not immediately known.
[Associated
Press;
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