Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
PROPERTY FROM AN IMPORTANT AMERICAN COLLECTION
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)

Nature morte au guéridon

Details
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
Nature morte au guéridon
signed 'Picasso' (lower right) and dated '20-4-21-' (upper left)
pastel on paper laid down on card
10 7/8 x 8 ½ in. (27.6 x 21.5 cm.)
Drawn on 20 April 1921
Provenance
Joseph L. Shulman, New York (by 1974).
Alexander Raydon, New York (acquired from the estate of the above).
By descent from the above to the present owner.
Exhibited
Hartford, Wadsworth Atheneum, Selections from the Joseph L. Shulman Collection, March-April 1975, p. 13 (illustrated, p. 27).
Sale Room Notice
Please note the dimensions for the present lot are 10 7/8 x 8 ½ in. (27.6 x 21.5 cm.).

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Vanessa Fusco
Vanessa Fusco

Lot Essay

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

In the summer of 1919, Picasso and his wife, the Russian ballerina Olga Khokhlova, sojourned to the South of France to enjoy their second honeymoon. There Picasso began a series of gouaches and drawings of guéridons, or pedestal tables, which would occupy him for much of the next two years. These guéridons were so central to his work at this time that John Richardson devotes a chapter entitled Summer at Saint-Raphaël (The Guéridon) to them in his definitive biography on the artist, explaining that "Picasso's traditional attitude toward the bride who loved to sit for him made it very difficult to portray her in any but a traditionally representative way. To reconcile conventional love for Olga with his pursuit of modernity, he turned to the subject of the anthropomorphic guéridon, which had preoccupied him the previous winter, and applied it to Olga instead of to himself...[T]he works executed at Saint-Raphaël are about Olga and are intrinsically feminine, honeymoon images that radiate with love and sunny freshness and no hints of Picassian darkness" (A Life of Picasso, The Triumphant Years, 1917-1932, New York, 2007, vol. 3, p. 136). 
During this period, Picasso worked alternately in both Cubist and Neoclassical styles, and sometimes interwove them. In 1920, the Cubist elements trumped the Neoclassical ones in Picasso's still-lifes, as he reduced the picture window, table and its accoutrements to simple geometric shapes. The resulting compositions, such as the present work, were more abstract than those of the summer before. 
As Richardson notes, "The development of this last great period of Synthetic Cubism can easily be followed through the 'Guéridons'...No longer did Picasso feel obligated to investigate the intricate formal and spatial problems that preoccupied him ten years before. Instead he felt free to relax and exploit his cubist discoveries in a decorative manner that delights the eye...Never again did the artist's style recapture the air of magisterial calm that is such a feature of this last great phase of Cubism" (Picasso, An American Tribute, New York, 1962, p. 52).

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