PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
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PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
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On occasion, Christie's has a direct financial int… Read more Property from an Important Private European Collection
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)

Le peintre et son modèle

Details
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
Le peintre et son modèle
signed ‘Picasso’ (lower left); dated ‘8.9.11.64.’ (on the reverse)
oil and Ripolin on canvas
51 1/8 x 76 3/4 in. (130 x 195 cm.)
Painted on 8-9 November 1964
Provenance
Galerie Louise Leiris (Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler), Paris.
Richard K. Weil, St. Louis, Missouri.
Galerie Beyeler, Basel (acquired from the above, 19 December 1985).
Private collection, Europe (acquired from the above, 10 October 1997).
By descent from the above to the present owner.
Literature
C. Zervos, Pablo Picasso, Paris, 1971, vol. 24, no. 263 (illustrated, pl. 99).
P. Cabanne, Le siècle de Picasso, Paris, 1975, vol. II (illustrated).
W. Spies, ed., Pablo Picasso, Die zwei Geschwindigkeiten im Spätwek, Baden-Baden, 2004, p. 23 (illustrated).
Exhibited
Basel, Galerie Beyeler, Aus privaten Sammlungen, February-April 1986, no. 57.
Basel, Galerie Beyeler, Picasso, der Maler und seine Modelle, July-October 1986, pp. 98 and 110, no. 54 (illustrated in color, pp. 98-99).
Humlebaek, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Picasso 1960-1973, October 1988-January 1989, pp. 63-64, no. 16 (illustrated in color on the front and back cover).
Basel, Galerie Beyeler, L’éternel féminin, November 1989-January 1990, no. 58 (illustrated in color).
Hannover, Sprengel Museum, Die Metamorphosen der Bilder, November 1992-February 1993, pp. 154-158 and 317, no. 88 (illustrated in color, p. 157).
Lausanne, FAE Musée d’art contemporain, Picasso contemporain, May-September 1994, pp. 73 and 129 (illustrated, pp. 72-73).
Sapporo, Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art; Nagasaki, Huis ten Bosch Museum of Art; Kyoto, Municipal Museum of Art and Tokyo, Mitsukoshi Museum of Art, Exhibition from Swiss Private Collections, May-November 1996, p. 46, no. 15 (illustrated, p. 47).
Madrid, Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Picasso, Las grandes series, March-June 2001, pp. 298 and 451-452, no. 84 (illustrated in color, pp. 298 and 451).
Milan, Palazzo Reale, Picasso: 200 capolavori dal 1898 al 1972, September 2001-January 2002, pp. 307 and 363, no. 175 (illustrated in color, p. 307).
Baden-Baden, Museum Sammlung Frieder Burda, Picasso, Von Mougins nach Baden-Baden, Der späte Picasso, September 2005-January 2006, pp. 37 and 80 (illustrated in color, p. 37).
Dusseldorf, Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Picasso, Malen gegen die Zeit, February-May 2007, p. 79, no. 26 (illustrated in color).
Berlin, Galerie Céline und Heiner Bastian am Kupfergarten, Picasso, Die Freiheit der späten Werke, February-April 2011, p. 69, no. 5 (illustrated in color, pp. 32-33 and 69).
Aix-en-Provence, Musée Granet, Chefs-d’œuvre du musée Frieder Burda, Baden-Baden, May-September 2012, pp. 62 and 212, no. 12 (illustrated in color, p. 63).
Kunsthalle Bremen, Sylvette, Sylvette, Sylvette: Picasso und das Modell, February-June 2014, p. 254, no. 89 (illustrated in color, p. 255).
Martigny, Fondation Pierre Gianadda, Picasso: L'œuvre ultime, hommage à Jacqueline, June-November 2016, p. 92, no. 32 (illustrated in color, pp. 92-93).
Special Notice
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Brought to you by

Vanessa Fusco
Vanessa Fusco Head of Department, Impressionist & Modern Art, New York

Lot Essay

At the beginning of 1963, Pablo Picasso became obsessed by a subject that had stood at the heart of his art for the entirety of his career. Over the course of two weeks in February, he filled the pages of a small carnet with more than two dozen sketches of a studio interior in which a painter is seen working at his easel in the presence of a reclining nude model (Musée Picasso, Carnet no. 59). On 2 March he began the first of an extended series of oil paintings on this theme (Zervos, vol. 23, no. 154; Kunstmuseum St. Gallen). Hélène Parmelin, the wife of painter Edouard Pignon, both of whom were close friends of the artist, recounted the excitement surrounding the inception of these works: “Picasso lets loose. He paints ‘The Painter and his Model.' And from that moment on he paints like a madman, perhaps never before with such frenzy” (op. cit., 1965, p. 10). On 27 March, Picasso acknowledged that he was in the grip of a new and compelling inspiration when he declared to Michel Leiris: “Painting is stronger than I am. It makes me do what it wants” (quoted in P. Daix, Picasso: Life and Art, New York, 1993, p. 349).
From this point until 1965 Picasso painted and drew mostly variations on this theme. The artist and model appear together, as in Le peintre et son modèle, or alone as male or female portraits and nude figure paintings. The male subjects are almost invariably stand-ins for Picasso himself—in the present work he is sporting the artist’s signature blue-and-white striped Breton top—and the models are most typically the figure of his wife, Jacqueline. He gave relatively little time to other subjects, and it was not until the musketeers made their appearance in April 1967 that his preoccupation with the artist and model theme appeared to have subsided, although it was still far from having run its course, and it continued to manifest itself in new guises.
Held in the same private family collection since 1997, Le peintre et son modèle is a quintessential example of this great series of artist and model works, executed on an unusually large scale. Painted in early November 1964, this is one of an autumn campaign from this year, which is characterized by the mostly large canvases executed in both vertical and horizontal formats. The group is distinguished by its light, pastel palette of delicate pale greens and pink or lavender tones, as if painted with the silvery winter Mediterranean light flooding through the windows into his studio. Laid over these hues is a series of black lines that define the essential features of the male painter and female nude, their bodies appearing from an almost cryptogram-like arrangement of lines and shapes that delineate their faces and bodies. In the present work, a minimally described brush, palette and the barest suggestion of an easel are discernible in the bottom left corner; the artist himself appears to be turning away from his tools to speak to his female companion, who is gently enveloped in folds of blue and white fabric. The warmth and intimacy of their relationship is self-evident from their smiles and the direction of the model’s gaze.
Though the subject of the artist and model had been a prominent theme weaving through the various strands of Picasso’s multi-faceted oeuvre, never before had the artist explored so closely and with such intensity this essential artistic relationship of the painter and his subject. When, in 1963, Picasso began this series, Hélène Parmelin recalled the artist’s fervent embrace of this motif: “And now he says he is turning his back on everything,” she described. “He says he is embarking upon an incredible adventure. He says that everything is changed; it is over and done with; painting is completely different from what one had thought—perhaps it is even the opposite. It is a time that he declares himself ready to kill modern ‘art’—and hence art itself—in order to rediscover painting... One must, says Picasso, look for something that develops all by itself, something natural and not manufactured. ‘Let it unfold in the form of the natural and not in the form of art... The grass as grass, the tree as tree, the nude as nude...’” (Picasso: The Artist and His Model, New York, 1965, pp. 9-10).
Picasso had finished his look backwards to the art of the great masters that had come before him—Eugène Delacroix, Diego Velázquez, Edouard Manet and Nicolas Poussin—and instead honed in on the very nature of art making itself. As if trying to find the key to his own innate abilities as a painter, he focused entirely on the realm of the studio, the private, haloed sanctum of artistic inspiration and creativity. Here, as Marie-Laure Bernadac described, he captured upon the canvas, “the impossible, the secret alchemy that takes place between the real model, the artist’s vision and feeling, and the reality of paint” (Late Picasso, exh. cat., The Tate Gallery, London, 1988, p. 76).
The abiding presence in this great series of works was Picasso’s great love, second wife and indomitable muse of his late period: Jacqueline Picasso. It is her presence and image that fills so much of Picasso’s work of this time. Having met in the early 1950s, the pair were married in 1961. Jacqueline served as Picasso’s most beloved companion, protector, muse and model. As William Rubin wrote, “Picasso did not have to win Jacqueline from another man, nor struggle to keep her. Her understated, gentle, and loving personality, combined with her unconditional commitment to him, provided an emotionally stable life and a dependable foyer over a longer period that he had ever before enjoyed” (Picasso and Portraiture, exh. cat., The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1996, p. 458).
When considered in a wider artistic context, Le peintre et son modèle and the rest of this series once again show Picasso as an artist who remained at the forefront of the avant-garde until the end. In the early 1960s, abstraction reigned supreme, with Pop art and Minimalism coming to the fore. Traditional easel painting, many were suggesting, was redundant and outmoded, its future questioned in a time when industrial materials and mechanical techniques dominated artistic production. Yet, just as he had in the early twentieth century, Picasso defied expectation by remaining resolutely bound to the essential, time-honored elements and processes of art. His large canvases painted with gestural, lavish strokes of thick color and strident lines that depict, through timeless subjects of the artist or the model, the very act of painting itself, showed that the medium was far from dead; indeed, as Picasso showed, it was thriving. “There is no abstract art”, the artist had declared in 1935. “You must always start with something. Afterward you can remove all traces of reality. There’s no danger then, anyway, because the idea of the object will have left an indelible mark” (quoted in K.L. Kleinfelder, The Artist, His Model, Her Image, His Gaze: Picasso’s Pursuit of the Model, Chicago and London, 1993, p. 137).

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