The winning ticket draw is scheduled for Tuesday at Christie's auction house in Paris. The first lottery, titled "1 Picasso for 100 euros," was held in 2013, when a fire sprinkler installer from Pennsylvania won the painting "Man in the Opera Hat," which the Spanish master painted in 1914 during his Cubist period. A second Picasso work, the oil on canvas "Nature Morte," was drawn in the 2020 lottery and delighted Italian Claudia Borgogno, whose son bought the ticket as a Christmas gift. That still life, painted in 1921, was purchased for the lottery from billionaire art collector David Nahmad, who stated in a rare interview with The Associated Press that Picasso would have approved of this method of distributing his works. Picasso died in 1973. "Picasso was very generous. He gave paintings to his driver, his tailor," Nahmad said. "He wanted his art to be in the collections of all kinds of people, not just the super-rich." The gouache on paper "Tรชte de Femme" ("Head of a Woman"), which will be offered to the lucky winner next week, was painted by Picasso in 1941. The Alzheimer Research Foundation, the organizer of this charity lottery, operates within one of Paris's leading public hospitals and notes that since its founding in 2004, it has become the leading private funder of medical research related to Alzheimer's disease in France. Christie's auction house announced that the painting will be exhibited from Monday in its Paris galleries, with the winning ticket draw to be held on Tuesday at 6 p.m. Organizers on the online ticket sales platform state that the number of tickets will be limited to 120,000, meaning that if all are sold, the lottery could raise 12 million euros ($14 million). From that amount, one million euros will be paid to the international Opera Gallery and the art dealer who owns the painting. Organizers remind that the previous two lotteries with Picasso works raised a total of over 10 million euros for cultural projects in Lebanon and for water supply and hygiene programs in Africa.