ARTFEED — Contemporary Art Intelligence

Picasso's 'La Loge' on View at PwC Tower in Milan

exhibition · 2026-04-26

Pablo Picasso's 'La Loge', a 1921 ballet stage design fragment from 'Cuadro Flamenco', is on public display at the 27th floor of the Libeskind-designed PwC Tower in Milan. The exhibition, titled 'Sguardi dalla Torre', runs three consecutive weekends from November 9 to 24, 2024, with free reservation. It is the second edition of the initiative by PwC per la Cultura, in collaboration with the Pinacoteca di Brera. The work, originally part of a larger set for Sergei Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, was cut and sold in pieces in 1926 due to financial difficulties. Acquired by Brera in poor condition, it was restored in 2015 and first exhibited in 2019. After the PwC showing, it will move to Palazzo Citterio, opening December 7, 2024. The partnership stems from a 'Patto per Brera' between PwC Italy chairman Giovanni Andrea Toselli and Brera director Angelo Crespi, pledging support for the museum's future.

Key facts

  • Picasso's 'La Loge' is displayed at the 27th floor of PwC Tower in Milan.
  • The work is a fragment of a 1921 stage design for 'Cuadro Flamenco' by Ballets Russes.
  • The exhibition 'Sguardi dalla Torre' runs November 9-24, 2024, on three weekends.
  • Access is free with reservation.
  • The initiative is by PwC per la Cultura in collaboration with Pinacoteca di Brera.
  • The work was restored in 2015 and first exhibited in 2019.
  • After PwC, it will be housed at Palazzo Citterio, opening December 7, 2024.
  • The partnership is part of a 'Patto per Brera' between PwC and the museum.

Entities

Artists

  • Pablo Picasso
  • Sergei Diaghilev
  • Juan Gris
  • Olga Khokhlova
  • Franco Russoli
  • Angelo Crespi
  • Giovanni Andrea Toselli
  • Alessandro Grandinetti
  • Chiara Carotenuto

Institutions

  • PwC
  • PwC per la Cultura
  • Pinacoteca di Brera
  • Ballets Russes
  • Palazzo Citterio
  • La Scala
  • Artribune

Locations

  • Milan
  • Italy
  • Paris
  • France
  • PwC Tower
  • Torre Libeskind

Sources