VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 1… Read more
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)

Tête de femme

Details
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
Tête de femme
signed and dated '30 Mars 43 Picasso' (lower right)
gouache and wash on paper
25 7/8 x 19 7/8 in. (65.7 x 50.4 cm.)
Executed on 30 March 1943
Provenance
Galerie Louise Leiris, Paris (no. 013252).
Acquired from the above by the previous owner in 1943; sale, Christie's, London, 23 June 2005, lot 489.
Acquired at the above sale by the present owner.
Literature
C. Zervos, Pablo Picasso, oeuvres de 1942 et 1943, vol. 12, Paris, 1961, no. 314 (illustrated p. 157).
The Picasso Project (ed.), Picasso's Paintings, Watercolors, Drawings and Sculpture: Nazi Occupation, 1940-1944, San Francisco, 1999, no. 43-107 (illustrated p. 214).

Special Notice
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 15% on the buyer's premium

Brought to you by

Teresa Krasny
Teresa Krasny

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

Maya Widmaier-Picasso has confirmed the authenticity of this work.

Claude Picasso has confirmed the authenticity of this work.


Picasso spent most of March 1943 working on his monumental sculpture, L'homme au mouton (Spies, no. 280). His last dated study related to it, the gouache Tête de mouton, was painted on 30 March, the same date of execution as the present work. Picasso drew with brush and thinned oil a series of seven women's heads (Zervos, vol. 12, nos. 310-316), including the present work. In contrast to the naturalistic, chiaroscuro studies that he made for the sculpture in order to work in three-dimensional volume, Picasso reduced the linear and planar elements in this series of heads to the barest essentials, producing images that were flat and sign-like. On 31 March he continued this idea in pen and ink, creating four simple line drawings, the last of which he brushed in with tinted wash (Zervos, vol. 12, nos. 307-309 and 318; the latter in the Musée Picasso, Paris).

The subject of these heads is Dora Maar, who became Picasso's lover in late 1936, only a year after the artist's youthful mistress Marie-Thérèse Walter had given birth to their daughter Maya. This group marks the continuance of a long line of portraits that Picasso made of Dora over the course of almost a decade, ending in 1945. Picasso often depicted her, as seen here, wearing a hat. Brigitte Léal has written, "...If Marie-Thérèse incarnated a wild beauty, a sporty and beautiful 'wild plant,' Dora Maar is the perfect prototype of the surrealist Egeria, capricious and eccentric....The most provocative emblem of her somewhat flashy elegance is the little over-ornate hat that Picasso's placed on her head (he would soon give the object a ridiculous, then grotesque, and even threatening, aspect....). In its preciousness and fetishistic vocation, the feminine hat was, like the glove, an exotic accessory highly prized by the Surrealists.... A crown of daffodils, an urchin's beret, or a cool straw hat for Marie-Thérèse, painted like a Manet; nets, veils and the great wings of a voracious insect for Dora: even their respective ornaments point to the glaring differences in the temperament between the two women" (in Picasso and Portraiture, exh. cat., The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1996, pp. 387-392).

More from Impressionist/Modern Works on Paper

View All
View All