Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
A DIALOGUE THROUGH ART: WORKS FROM THE JAN KRUGIER COLLECTION
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)

Quatre fruits

Details
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
Quatre fruits
pencil on paper
9 5/8 x 12 3/8 in. (24.5 x 32 cm.)
drawn in 1909
Provenance
Estate of the artist.
Marina Picasso (by descent from the above).
Jan Krugier, acquired from the above.
Literature
C. Zervos, Pablo Picasso, Paris, 1973, vol. 26, no. 415 (illustrated, pl. 152).
C. Lange and R. Diederen, Das ewige Auge: Von Rembrandt bis Picasso, Meisterwerke aus der Sammlung Jan Krugier und Marie Anne Krugier-Poniatowski, exh. cat., Kunsthalle der Hypo-Kulturstiftung, Munich, 2007, p. 12 (illustrated in color, p. 10, fig. 1; titled Vier Apfel).
Exhibited
Vienna, Albertina Museum, Goya bis Picasso: Meisterwerke der Sammlung Jan Krugier und Marie Anne Krugier-Poniatowski, April-August 2005, p. 306, no. 131 (illustrated in color, p. 307).

Lot Essay

Picasso's sojourn in the Spanish town of Horta del Ebro during the spring and summer of 1909 was extremely productive, and would prove to be an important stage in the development of Cubism. He completed numerous landscapes, figure and portrait paintings of his companion Fernande Olivier, but only few still lifes. In these paintings he worked out his method of faceting the forms in his subjects. By concentrating on the overall architecture in his compositions, and relating the parts to the whole, he was now able to render objects with more solidity and firmness, lending them greater weight and presence.

Picasso returned to Paris in September. Within several weeks he moved out of his living quarters and studio in the Bateau-Lavoir in Montmartre, and rented more spacious and upscale rooms at 11, boulevard de Clichy, near the place Pigalle. The apartment soon filled up with new furnishings and bric-a-brac he and Fernande bought during their walks in the neighborhood. The artist renewed his interest in painting the still life, and many of these objects soon found their way into his paintings.

As he had done in the past, Picasso turned to the paintings of Paul Cézanne for guidance (fig. 1). Years later he told his friend Brassaï, "As if I didn't know Cézanne! He was my one and only master! Don't you think I looked at his paintings? I spent years studying them. Cézanne! He was like the father of us all" (quoted in Brassaï, Conversations with Picasso, Chicago, 1999, p. 107). Picasso took the apple--the basic unit, as it were, in Cézanne still lifes--and analytically "tore" into it, as if he had carved up the real fruit with knife and corer. Indeed, he executed numerous drawings and watercolors of apples that autumn (cf. Zervos, vol. 2*, nos. 180 and 181; vol. 6, no. 1100; and Palau i Fabre, Cubism, no. 452), the present work among them.

At the same time he was making drawings, Picasso was also modeling sculptures in plaster--the large, well-known Tête de Fernande (Spies, no. 24), and a small apple (Spies, no. 26). John Richardson has written, "Picasso has taken a knife to the plaster apple and facetted it like a prism. For all its smallness, it has an imposing presence: a monument to an apple, also apparently a portrait of one. (Picasso gave the apple he claimed to have worked from to the Czech collector Vincenc Kramár, who preserved the shriveled memento until he died)" (A Life of Picasso: 1907-1917, New York, 1996, vol. II, p. 140). Jean Sutherland Boggs observed that "If [the apple sculpture] were much enlarged, it would be as if he had built roads, which he never permits to continue, and excavated cliffs, from which there is no escape, in his desire to make us experience the apple's three dimensions. It was like his modeling of the head of Fernande to be cast in bronze later that year, both the result of his admiration for Cézanne" (Picasso & Things, exh. cat., The Cleveland Museum of Art, 1992, p. 75).

(fig. 1) Paul Cézanne, Pommes, circa 1877-1878. Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge.

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