PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
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PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)

Minotaure caressant une dormeuse, from La Suite Vollard

Details
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
Minotaure caressant une dormeuse, from La Suite Vollard
drypoint, on Montval paper watermark Vollard, 1933, signed in pencil, a fine impression, from the edition of 260 (there was also an edition of 50 with wide margins), published by Ambroise Vollard, Paris, 1939, with full margins, in very good condition, framed
Image: 11 3⁄4 14 3⁄8 in. x (299 x 365 mm.)
Sheet: 13 3⁄8 x 17 5⁄8 in. (340 x 448 mm.)
Literature
Bloch 201; Baer 369

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Lindsay Griffith
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Lot Essay

The present work forms part of the Suite Vollard, a series of 100 etchings created by Pablo Picasso between 1930 and 1937, a seminal period in his career. The images function almost as entries in a diary, illustrating a galaxy of motifs and preoccupations, including the artist’s desire for his young mistress and muse Marie-Thérèse Walter, his fascination with the process of artistic creation and transformation, the battle of the sexes and the analogy of making art and making love.

The late 1920s were years of profound change for Picasso, with interwoven developments in both his artistic and personal life. Many of the themes that were to find form in the Suite can be traced back to these turbulent years. By then Picasso had left the poverty of his early life in Paris far behind. He lived a respectable, bourgeois existence with his wife, the former ballerina Olga Khokhlova. While he enjoyed the material benefits of success, Picasso began to resent restrictions on his freedom and gradually his marriage deteriorated. It was dealt the coup de graçe by Picasso’s chance encounter with the seventeen-year-old Marie-Thérèse Walter in 1927.

The forty-five year-old artist’s opening gambit on meeting the young woman has entered Picasso lore. Struck by her Grecian profile and sensuous physique, Picasso reportedly approached her saying: “Mademoiselle, you have an interesting face. I would like to do a portrait of you. I feel we are going to do great things together...I am Picasso” (quoted in A Question of Identity, Michael Fitzgerald, in Picasso’s Marie-Thérèse, Acquavella Galeries, New York, 2008, pp. 11). For much of the next decade her features and classical profile would dominate Picasso’s work, not least in the Suite Vollard.

A key element in Picasso’s oeuvre and personal mythology, the Minotaur, is present in no fewer than twenty-one scenes in the Suite. For the Surrealists, the Minotaur represented the dark center of man’s violent, irrational desires. While he also recognized the Minotaur as the monster within, Picasso identified the creature more closely with the fighting bull of his native Spain, whose power, pride and ferocity he regarded as corresponding to his own virile persona. The present lot, an exceptionally fine impression of Minotaure caressant une dormouse, is amongst the most tender and powerful evocations of Picasso’s love for Marie-Thérèse in any medium, and is one of the most important, and sought after, plates in the series.

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