Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's… 顯示更多 建築師之眼: 歐洲私人珍藏
巴布羅.畢加索 (1881-1973)

檸檬與玻璃杯

細節
巴布羅.畢加索 (1881-1973)
檸檬與玻璃杯
簽名及日期:Picasso 22 (右下)
油彩 畫布
13 x 16 1/8 吋(33 x 41.2公分)
1922年作於迪納爾
來源
緬因州藍山琳恩‧湯普森珍藏
紐約克里曼畫廊(編號K4293)
1975年布魯塞爾克勞德‧戎岡畫廊
倫敦布魯克街畫廊
歐洲私人藏家購自上述畫廊
現藏家於1994年購自上述藏家
出版
1923年5月至6月紐約惠特尼工作室畫廊「The Spring Salon」展覽
1975年11月至1976年1月布魯塞爾克勞德‧戎岡畫廊「Picasso intime」展覽,編號270,頁42
展覽
J. Cassou著,《Picasso》,紐約,1940年,頁116
C. Zervos著,《Pablo Picasso》第4卷,《Oeuvres de 1920 à 1922》,巴黎,1951年,編號420,頁數不詳(插圖,圖174)
注意事項
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.

拍品專文

‘If Cubism is an art of transition I am sure that the only thing that will come out of it is another form of Cubism’
(Picasso, quoted in K.E. Silver, Esprit des Corps: The Art of the Parisian Avant-Garde and the First World War, 1914-1925, London, 1989, p. 350)

Pablo Picasso’s Citron et verre was painted in the summer of 1922, while the artist was holidaying with his wife Olga and young son Paulo in the fashionable northern beach resort of Dinard. Here he created a series of small cubist still-lifes, of which Citron et verre is one, that are jewel-like in their use of dazzling colour, ornate patterning and complex construction. The simple trio of objects – a lemon, glass and another indistinguishable object – are depicted with simple linear outlines, their forms accentuated and united by several horizontally striated passages that when set against the flat geometric planes of colour express a sense of volume and space. Exemplifying the artist’s continued development of Synthetic Cubism, this painting shows the artist using his cubist discoveries in a decorative, simplified and playful way, a reflection of the happily contented life he was leading at this time.

Citron et verre also embodies the eclecticism of Picasso’s art during this post-war period. Just the previous summer, the artist, while staying at Fontainebleau, had created a series of large, classical nudes. Rendered with exaggerated, volumetric forms, these statuesque figurative works were a radical contrast from the flattened, fragmented world of Picasso’s concurrent Cubism. During the summer of 1922 at Dinard, Picasso again returned to the theme of Classicism, painting, alongside Citron et verre and this series of cubist still-lifes, the large, Neo-Classical Deux femmes courant sur la plage (Musée Picasso, Paris). With all of these works, Picasso was ceaselessly exploring the concept and possibilities of form. From abstraction to representation, illusion and reality, volume and flatness, the artist, with an astounding ease, moved between these stylistic paradoxes to create a body of work that continues to intrigue. Citron et verre was first owned by Lynne Thompson, an American collector based in Maine, whose collection included Pollock, Rothko, Klee and Picasso.

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