Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF RONALD P. STANTON
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)

Tête couronnée

Details
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
Tête couronnée
signed, dated and numbered 'Picasso 24.6.60. IX' (upper left)
black Conté crayon on paper
25 ½ x 19 ½ in. (65 x 49.6 cm.)
Drawn on 24 June 1960
Provenance
Benno Gitter, Tel Aviv; Estate sale, Christie's, New York, 9 November 2006, lot 193.
Acquired at the above sale by the late owner.
Literature
C. Zervos, Pablo Picasso, Paris, 1968, vol. 19, no. 367 (illustrated, pl. 109).
Exhibited
Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Picasso, October 2002-February 2003, p. 83, no. 63 (illustrated).

Brought to you by

Vanessa Fusco
Vanessa Fusco

Lot Essay

Picasso painted numerous portraits of male friends and colleagues during his early career. He is, of course, far more famous for later having obsessively depicted the notable women in his life–Fernande Olivier, his first wife Olga Khokhlova, Marie-Thérèse Walter, Dora Maar, Françoise Gilot and finally Jacqueline Roque, his lover since 1954, whom he married in 1961. While he occasionally drew portraits of male literary friends and a few other men after the mid-1920s, he never painted them, and only rarely depicted anonymous male subjects. The heads, busts and figures of men and boys suddenly abound, however, among his late works in all media.
The unshaven man in the present work is in the classic Mediterranean mold, of a type as old as antiquity. His forebears in earlier millennia might have joined the Argive expedition to the shores of Troy, accompanied Theseus on his quest for the Golden Fleece, or in real history been traders between southern Europe and the Levant. He might have helped turn the tide of battle aboard the galleys at Salamis, Actium or Lepanto. Picasso could easily relate to this kind of man—the sea was in his blood, too. He had been born by the Mediterranean, in Málaga, Spain. He grew up in La Coruña, on the Atlantic coast; his family subsequently moved to Barcelona, again on the Mediterranean. When as a family man during the 1920s and 1930s he needed a vacation away from Paris, he normally chose destinations on the Atlantic or Mediterranean coasts.

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