Pablo Picasso Carmen (Cramer No. 52, Baer 829) 1949

Pablo Picasso Carmen

Artist: Pablo Picasso

Title: Monogram "L" with Landscape (Plate XXXIII)

Portfolio: 1949 Carmen

Medium: Original etching on Montval wove paper

Date: 1949

Edition: 289

Sheet Size: 13" x 10 3/16"

Signature: No (signed and numbered on the justification page)

Reference: Cramer No. 52, Baer 829

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Pablo Picasso was born on October 25, 1881, in Málaga, Spain. The son of an academic painter, José Ruiz Blanco, he began to draw at an early age. In 1895, the Picasso family moved to Barcelona. It was there that Pablo studied at La Lonja, the local academy of fine arts. His association with the patrons of the café Els Quatre Gats in the late 1890s was crucial to his early artistic development in that the café was a nexus of social life among artists, authors, musicians, and the like, as well as the site of several music performances and tertulias ('literary gatherings'). In 1900, Pablo Picasso's first exhibition took place in Barcelona, and in the fall of the same year he visited Paris for the first time. It was in Paris where he observed the paintings of Edouard Manet, Gustave Courbet, and Henri Toulouse-Lautrec. He settled there in April 1904, and soon his circle of friends included the poet Guillaume Apollinaire, writer Max Jacob, Gertrude and Leo Stein, and art dealers Ambroise Vollard and Berthe Weill. Picasso's visual style and choice of subject matter developed dramatically over a short period of time. The time between 1901 and 1904 has come be known as his 'Blue Period,' 1905 his 'Rose Period,' from 1908 to 1911 his Analytic Cubist phase, and from 1912 forward his Synthetic Cubist phase. The Blue Period is named for Picasso's color palette at the time, and is distinguished by its subject matter: vagrants, outcasts, prostitutes, and otherwise marginalized people. The Rose Period marked a brightening of Picasso's palette: pinks, beiges, roses, and light blues. His choice of subject matter followed suit: clowns, harlequins, and saltimbanques ('circus people'). Picasso's name is synonymous with the development of Cubism, which is the permutation of several artistic trends and of the styles of certain artists. Through Gertrude and Leo Stein, Picasso knew Henri Matisse, who had stirred audiences in 1905 with paintings displaying harsh, dissonant colors. Critics chided Matisse's paintings, while Picasso admired them. He also admired the so-called 'primitive' works of Henri Rousseau. While in Paris, Picasso frequented the Musée d'Ethnographie du Trocadéro, where he saw works of indigenous African art, and in Spain discovered ancient Iberian sculpture. Through a collaboration with the artist Georges Braque, Picasso gradually combined his influences into a wholly original style, which fragmented three-dimensional forms into abstract geometric shapes that intertwined and overlapped each other. His first major Cubist work was the renowned Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, which he completed in 1907 but didn't not show to anyone until 1916. By 1936, the Spanish Civil War affected Pablo Picasso immensely, and the following year he completed Guernica, which depicts the bombing of the Spanish city of the same name. Picasso's association with the Communist Party began in 1944, and in the latter half of the decade he lived in the southern France. Among the large number of Picasso exhibitions that were held during the artist's lifetime, those at Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1939 and at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris in 1955 were the most significant. In 1961, the artist married Jacqueline Roque, and they moved to the town of Mougins. He continued to work in painting, drawing, prints, ceramics, and sculpture there until his death on April 8, 1973.

Pablo Picasso, Monogram "L" with Landscape (Plate XXXIII), 1949 Carmen Portfolio, (Cramer No. 52, Baer 829), 1949, Unsigned, Original etching on Montval wove paper, Edition 289, 13" x 10 3/16" Sheet Size

Gallery Reference:

PPC33

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