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Stolen Picasso cubist work returned to France

La Coiffeuse, stolen from a Paris museum in 2001, was found last year by a New Jersey shipping company after sent in a parcel from Belgium.

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‘La Coiffeuse’, a cubist work by Pablo Picasso worth about 15 million dollars, will be returned to France via the French embassy, US officials have said, reports FRANCE 24. The painting was stolen 14 years ago in Paris.

The 1911 cubist oil painting was smuggled out of a storeroom of the Georges Pompidou centre in 2001.

The work, which had been bequeathed to the French government, was last exhibited in Munich in 1998 before being returned to Paris and stored at the Centre Pompidou.

Officials at a shipping facility discovered the 33 x 46 centimetre (13x18 inch) painting wrapped in parcel paper when the package was inspected upon its arrival in Newark, New Jersey, in the weeks before Christmas last year. It had been sent from Belgium via the FedEx shipping company by someone who declared that the package contained an “art craft/toy” valued at 30 euros ($37) and with shipping documents reading "Joyeux Noël" (Merry Christmas).

US security authorities later transferred the painting to New York pending an investigation.

French art experts travelled to New York in January to verify the authenticity of the work using photographs and historical records, eventually concluding that it was Picasso's ‘La Coiffeuse’.

US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials said the painting would be returned via the French embassy in Washington, DC.

Read more of this report from FRANCE 24.