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

Le repas frugal

细节
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
Le repas frugal
etching
1904
on wove paper
unsigned
a very fine, rich and dark impression
one of a few impressions printed before the plate was steel-faced
some staining, discolouration and two tears in the margins
Plate 46 x 37,8 cm. (18 1⁄8 x 14 7⁄8 in.)
Sheet 58,3 x 43,9 cm. (23 x 17 ¼ in.)
来源
Private European collection; Christie's, New York, 11 May 1982, lot 419.
Acquired at the above sale; then by descent to the present owners.
出版
G. Bloch, Catalogue de l'oeuvre gravé et lithographé 1904-1967, Bern, 1968, vol. I, no. 1, p. 20 (another impression ill.).
B. Baer & B. Geiser, Picasso – Peintre-Graveur, Bern, 1990, no. 2 II a, pp. 18-20 (another impression ill.).
展览
Hamburg, Hamburger Kunsthalle, Picasso - Der Blinde Minotaurus - Die Sammlung Hegewisch in der Hamburger Kunsthalle, p. 17 (ill.) & pp. 75-76.
Hamburg, Hamburger Kunsthalle, Aus der Werkstatt des Künstlers - Druckgraphik und vorbereitende Zeichnungen der Sammlung Hegewisch, March – October 1999 and March – October 2000, p. 73 (ill.) & p.106.
Oslo, Munchmuseet, Pablo Picasso - Den blinde Minotaurus - grafikk og tegning, November 2002 - February 2003 (no cat.).
Hamburg, Ernst Barlach Haus, Pablo Picasso - Der Stier und das Mädchen - Meisterblätter aus der Sammlung Hegewisch, June - October 2010, no. 2 (ill.), p. 110.
Hamburg, Hamburger Kunsthalle, Mit dem inneren Auge sehen - Meisterwerke aus der Sammlung Hegewisch, September 2016 - January 2017, no. 25, p. 59 (ill.) & p. 76.

荣誉呈献

The image shows a person dressed in a dark suit, white shirt, and patterned tie, shown in grayscale.
Tim Schmelcher International Specialist

拍品专文

Le repas frugal is Picasso’s second etching, created when the artist was only 23 years old, yet it is one of the greatest in the history of printmaking and a key work of his early career, perhaps the quintessential and final Blue Period icon.

‘Picasso was working at the time on an etching, which has become famous since: it is of a man and a woman sitting at a table in a wine-shop. There is the most intense feeling of poverty and alcoholism and a startling realism in the figures of this wretched, starving couple’ (F. Olivier, Picasso and his friends, London, 1964, pp. 27-28).

In this way Fernande Olivier describes Le repas frugal, which she saw on her first visit to Picasso’s studio at the Bateau Lavoir in August 1904. What she probably did not know was that the woman in the print is a portrait of Madeleine, Picasso’s lover at the time. As it turned out, Picasso would divide his attentions between Madeleine and Fernande for quite some time before Fernande ultimately became the artist’s first great love and muse. In the summer of 1904 Madeleine however still played an important role in Picasso’s life in Paris. The man seated next to her is a figure from the artist’s past in Barcelona, from where he had moved only four months earlier. The figure first appears in several sketches and a gouache from 1903 and then in a large painting, Le repas de laveugle (Zervos, vol. 1, no. 168; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York), of the same year. The print thus ‘links Picasso’s Spanish past with his French future’ (J. Richardson, A Life of Picasso, vol. I, London, 1991, p. 300) and bridges the Blue and Rose Periods. Both the blind man from Barcelona and Madeleine from Paris would continue to haunt Picasso’s imagination and their chiseled features and gaunt bodies re-appear in different guises until 1905, in particular in an oil sketch and a charcoal drawing of 1904, in which the artist developed the composition of the couple sitting together in an embrace (see lot 337). Le repas frugal is the definitive, most elaborate iteration of this motif.

Whereas Madeleine would eventually be superseded in Picasso’s life and work by Fernande, the blind man would, as Roland Penrose observed, remain a central figure in the artist’s personal mythology: ‘The allegory of the blinded man has pursued Picasso throughout his life like a shadow as though reproaching him for his unique gift of vision’ (Picasso: His Life and Work, London, 1981, p. 89). Thirty years later, in a series of etchings, such as Minotaure aveugle guidé par une fillette dans la nuit, Picasso would recast this figure of self-reflection as a truly mythical creature, a blind minotaur. Just like the blind man in Le repas frugal, the minotaur is depicted as dependent on a young woman or girl for help and support (see also lot 323).

For Picasso, the years up to 1904 had been overshadowed by the suicide of Carles Casagemas in February 1901. With his final move to Paris in April 1904, he slowly began to shake off the gloom the death of his best friend had cast over him. The style and mood of his work gradually changed. Simultaneously, Picasso’s interest shifted from the urban poor to the saltimbanques, the strolling acrobat street performers of Paris. This is best illustrated by comparing Le repas de laveugle with the gouache Acrobate et jeune arlequin of 1905: there is an earthy weight and sense of deep sorrow about the former paintings, whilst the latter is imbued with an ethereal elegance not found in the earlier pictures. Melancholy rather than intense grief became the prevailing sentiment. This transition towards a less sombre atmosphere is also manifest in Le repas frugal: the misery of the scene is alleviated by the couple’s tender embrace and the woman’s knowing smile. The stylistic shift towards more refined, elegant figures is particularly pronounced in the print: the bodies are emaciated and their limbs elongated to the extreme – an effect that is perhaps intensified by the linear quality of the etching technique. Not without reason has it been described as a mannerist print.

Picasso’s first print, El Zurdo, was created in 1899 in Barcelona. It is a rather awkward work and the young artist presumably printed just a few impressions, of which only a single example survives. Four years later, probably prompted by his friend and neighbour Ricard Canals, Picasso tackled the medium once more and, apparently without further practice or experiments, created Le repas frugal. That a work of such technical mastery and haunting beauty was only his second attempt in the medium is testament to the artist’s extraordinary innate talent. Le repas frugal in that sense marks another departure: the beginning of Picasso’s life-long exploration of printmaking.

The earliest impressions of Le repas frugal were printed in small numbers by the master printer Auguste Delâtre (1822-1907), probably on demand, whenever Picasso requested one. It is not clear how many impressions were taken at the time, between September 1904 and March 1905. Bernhard Geiser and Brigitte Baer record one impression of the first state (Musée Picasso, Paris); and approximately 35 impressions of the second state.

Picasso was clearly proud of his print and had high hopes of making money from it. He sent two impressions to his friend Sebastiá Junyent in Barcelona, one to be passed on to Picasso’s father, the other to show to prospective purchasers. The etching was first exhibited in early 1905 at the Galeries Serrurier in Paris, together with some of his subsequent etchings of street performers. The proceeds from the exhibition hardly covered Picasso’s costs. Together with Le repas frugal, this group of early etchings later came to be known as La suite des saltimbanques. They were never properly published until 1913, when the plates were purchased by the publisher Ambroise Vollard and printed in an edition of 250. Vollard had the plates steel-faced, a process in which the copper plates were electroplated with a thin layer of steel so they could stand being printed in larger numbers. In the process, the etched lines lose depth and definition and print much less strongly. It is therefore only in the impressions made by Delâtre before steel-facing that the beauty and atmosphere can be fully appreciated. These early examples display intense contrasts and convey a strong sense of three-dimensionality. The present sheet appears to be one of the very first, before the plate began to show spots of corrosion at the upper left, and is remarkable for its modulated plate tone and rich blacks.

更多来自 扣人心弦:赫格维希珍藏第一部分

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