"Scène bachique au minotaure", from: "La suite Vollard"
Etching, 1933, on Montval paper, signed in pencil. P. 29,8 x 36,6 cm. S. 33,5 x 44,5 cm.
Bloch 192.
Vollardsviten hör till Picassos främsta och mest omfattande grafiska verk. Namnet har den fått genom beställaren, vännen och konsthandlaren Ambroise Vollard. Under åren 1930-37 utförde Picasso 100 olika motiv som avslöjar konstnärens besatthet med olika klassiska teman och ämnen. Mest iögonfallande är Minotauren, besten med mänsklig kropp och tjurhuvud som också får ses som ett alter ego för Picassos egen otämjbara kreativa skaparkraft och sexuella begär. I den mästerliga etsningen "Scène bachique au minotaure", uppfyller figurerna nästa hela bildytan och Minotaur med sin till skål upphöjda arm, omramar såväl som dominerar kompositionen.
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973), Spanish painter, printmaker, sculptor, and ceramist. Active in France since 1900. He is, alongside Matisse, the most dominant artist of the 20th century. After passing through a blue period, a pink period with circus scenes and harlequins, he created his first cubist painting, "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon," in 1907 under the influence of African sculptures. Together with Braque, he further developed cubism by breaking down surfaces, which were then represented in various simultaneous aspects. In 1912, he left nature and recreated a new reality, only to return to acrobats in 1916. During the 1920s, he approached surrealism and worked with whimsical forms while also producing drawings and etchings in line style. During the Spanish Civil War, he was violently stirred, and it is now that his great protest in the painting Guernica comes to fruition. In the late 1940s, he settled by the Mediterranean and produced nymphs, centaurs, and fauns, as well as paraphrases of the works of old masters, and painted powerful terracotta ceramics in Vallauris. His abundant graphic production follows the same development as his painting.
Pablo Picasso was not only an artist but also a skilled ceramist. During his lifetime, he created hundreds of ceramic works, such as jugs, vases, and plates. Picasso's passion for ceramics began when he visited the annual ceramics exhibition in Vallauris in southern France in 1946 and was introduced to the craft by the artist couple Suzanne and Georges Ramié, who owned the Madoura pottery. During the following years which he spent in Vallauris, Picasso met his second wife, Jacqueline Roque, whom he depicted on the ceramic pieces. He also decorated the ceramics with abstract animals and bullfighters in a cubist style.
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