拍品專文
Drawn in November 1920, Nature morte belongs to a focused group of intimate works on paper in which Picasso re-engages with the still-life motif through a renewed, architectonic clarity following the radical experiments of Synthetic Cubism. Here, the familiar studio ensemble—the guitar and a bowl of fruit—has been distilled into a sequence of interlocking planes, their volumes both compressed and expanded within a shallow, interior space. The table tilts forward, its structure articulated through a careful balance of line and softly modulated pastel, while the guitar, reduced to a near-emblematic form, anchors the composition at its center. The restrained palette of ochres, browns and cool blues reinforces the sense of compositional equilibrium, lending the sheet a quiet, meditative presence.
This work sits within a broader series of still-life interiors from the years immediately following the First World War, in which Picasso revisited Cubist principles with a new sense of order and legibility. Unlike the fractured, collage-like constructions of the 1910s, these compositions demonstrate a measured synthesis: objects remain abstracted, yet retain their legibility, suspended between representation and structure.
The present work is further distinguished by its personal provenance. It was dedicated and gifted by the artist to Léonide Massine, one of the leading figures of Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes and a close collaborator of Picasso during the formative years of modernist stage design. Their relationship, forged in Rome around 1917 during the production of Parade, placed Massine at the center of the avant-garde milieu, where he not only worked alongside artists such as Picasso, Matisse and Braque, but also assembled a remarkable collection of Cubist and Futurist works, often acquired directly from the artists themselves.
The subsequent ownership by Sidney Cohn—Massine’s lawyer—suggests a direct transfer from the dancer’s collection, preserving the work’s intimate chain of custody. Exhibited as part of Massine’s collection in New York in 1935, the sheet stands as both a refined example of Picasso’s post-Cubist still-life practice and a document of his close personal and artistic ties to one of the great protagonists of early twentieth-century modernism.
This work sits within a broader series of still-life interiors from the years immediately following the First World War, in which Picasso revisited Cubist principles with a new sense of order and legibility. Unlike the fractured, collage-like constructions of the 1910s, these compositions demonstrate a measured synthesis: objects remain abstracted, yet retain their legibility, suspended between representation and structure.
The present work is further distinguished by its personal provenance. It was dedicated and gifted by the artist to Léonide Massine, one of the leading figures of Sergei Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes and a close collaborator of Picasso during the formative years of modernist stage design. Their relationship, forged in Rome around 1917 during the production of Parade, placed Massine at the center of the avant-garde milieu, where he not only worked alongside artists such as Picasso, Matisse and Braque, but also assembled a remarkable collection of Cubist and Futurist works, often acquired directly from the artists themselves.
The subsequent ownership by Sidney Cohn—Massine’s lawyer—suggests a direct transfer from the dancer’s collection, preserving the work’s intimate chain of custody. Exhibited as part of Massine’s collection in New York in 1935, the sheet stands as both a refined example of Picasso’s post-Cubist still-life practice and a document of his close personal and artistic ties to one of the great protagonists of early twentieth-century modernism.
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