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Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)

Mousquetaire à la pipe

细节
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)
Mousquetaire à la pipe
signed 'Picasso' (upper right); dated and numbered '17.10.68 I' (on the reverse)
oil on canvas
57 5/8 x 35 1/8 in. (146.5 x 89.3 cm.)
Painted 17 October 1968
来源
Galerie Louise Leiris, Paris.
Stephen Hahn Gallery, New York (by 1969).
Arthur Spitzer, Los Angeles.
B.C. Holland, Inc., Chicago.
Private collection (acquired from the above, 22 November 1973); sale, Christie's, New York, 3 November 2004, lot 46.
Acquired at the above sale by the present owner.
出版
C. Zervos, Pablo Picasso, Paris, 1973, vol. 27, no. 343
(illustrated, pl. 135).
The Picasso Project, ed., Picasso's Paintings, Watercolors, Drawings and Sculpture: The Sixties III, 1968-1969, San Francisco, 2003, p.
58, no. 68-184 (illustrated).
展览
New York, Stephen Hahn Gallery, XIX & XX Century Paintings: Recent
Acquisitions
, New York, November 1969.
注意事项
On occasion, Christie's has a direct financial interest in the outcome of the sale of certain lots consigned for sale. This will usually be where it has guaranteed to the Seller that whatever the outcome of the auction, the Seller will receive a minimum sale price for the work. This is known as a minimum price guarantee. This is such a lot.

拍品专文

In early 1966, while convalescing in his home in Mougins from surgery, Picasso reread Alexandre Dumas' The Three Musketeers. Within a short time a new character entered Picasso's repertory of artist-surrogates--the musketeer, or more generally, the 17th century cavalier, the rakish nobleman who was skilled with the sword, daring in his romantic exploits, and in his tastes and appetites was a worldly gentleman who enjoyed all that life had to offer. In the early 1960s Picasso was fond of depicting himself in the figure of a brawny Mediterranean fisherman, either young or old, with a tossled beard and in a striped sailor's vest. The adventurous and virile musketeer replaced the fisherman as the artist's primary persona-of-choice. Now in his mid-80s, able to travel only locally, and with his vaunted sexual powers finally on the wane, Picasso transformed himself into the brave, adventurous and virile musketeer, wearing an elegant little beard and long wavy hair, and clad in doublets and ruffled collars. This would be the mask he would hold up most frequently to the world during the remaining years of his life.

Picasso painted Mousquetaire à la pipe in October 1968. It may seem an unusual subject at a time when America's war in Vietnam filled the headlines and Paris was still recovering from the throes of the great student uprising earlier that year. A few months earlier Soviet forces had invaded Czechoslovakia, ending the Prague Spring. The world's greatest living artist appeared to have retreated in a world of "backward-looking romantics and nostalgic dreamers" (M.-L. Bernadac, Late Picasso, exh. cat., The Tate Gallery, London, 1988, p. 82). Picasso's view of the musketeers is invariably comic and mock-heroic; these soldiers of derring-do are often ridiculous and overblown in their grandiose self-confidence. This subject may be tinged with Picasso's antiwar views, expressed in the image of a man ordinarily inclined to bellicose behavior, of the kind that had caused so much mayhem and carnage through the centuries. Here, having put his sword aside, the musketeer looks rather harmless and congenial.

Picasso was fond of his musketeers, and liked to ascribe personal qualities to them. Hélène Parmelin recalled how Picasso would play games in front of the canvases, with her and her husband, the painter and sculptor Edouard Pignon. Picasso would point to one or another musketeer and sympathically remark, "With this one you'd better watch out. That one makes fun of us. That one is enormously satisfied. This one is a grave intellectual. And that one look how sad he is, the poor guy. He must be a painter" (quoted in Picasso: Tradition and Avant-garde, exh. cat., Museo del Prado, Madrid, 2006, p. 340). The musketeers embody a virtual catalogue of varied human foibles, for which they appear to compensate with the irresistible force of their idealism. Picasso must have lamented a growing absence in the contemporary world of the recklessly individual spirit, the man of purposeful idea and action, a world-transforming genius, as he had been in his youthful career. In this respect, Picasso's appropriation of the musketeer image was an effort to reclaim a heroic stance in life, to affirm his ability, through wit and skill, to remain master of his fate during this final stage of his long life.

The first appearance of the 17th century cavalier in Picasso's late work occurred in one of his artist and model paintings, dated 13-14 March 1963, which Picasso revealed to his friend Hélène Parmelin as being "Rembrandt and Saskia." It was recorded under this title in the Zervos catalogue (vol. 23, no. 171; fig. 1). Picasso had in mind a similarly titled work by Rembrandt, in which the young Dutch artist, wearing a stylish hat and sword, frolics with his wife Saskia (fig. 2). Picasso had entered into a close and extended study of Rembrandt; he increasingly identified with the Dutch artist, who likewise had a long career, and was also fond of inserting himself, in one guise or another, into his paintings. Picasso was especially interested in Rembrandt's drawings and etchings, the quality and variety of which he sought to emulate in his own works in these media. John Richardson found a set of the six-volume catalogue of Rembrandt's drawings compiled by Otto Benesch in Picasso's library in 1986.

Uninspired by his reading of Dumas' The Three Musketeers, Picasso drew figures in 17th century costume a carnet that he used in March-April 1966, including the depiction of a cavalier/painter in front of his model (fig. 3). Picasso then introduced the musketeer theme in two drawings done in December 1966 (Zervos, vol. 25, nos. 257-258). He commenced a series of large ink wash bust-length portraits of musketeers later that month (Zervos, vol. 27, nos. 448-454). The first oil painting of this subject, done on 20 February 1967, again showed the cavalier as a painter, (Zervos, vol. 25, no. 280). Many musketeer heads followed, and Picasso then began to paint fuller-length seated portraits in April 1967 (Zervos, vol. 25; no. 338; fig. 4). This theme preoccupied Picasso through the late spring, but made way for other subjects during the summer and fall.

Picasso returned to the musketeer theme in January 1968, and treated it occasionally until October, when he painted the present work as one in a series of large, dramatic bust- and full-length musketeer portraits in which the subject is smoking a pipe. This group marks the central peak of Picasso's interest in this subject, and includes many of his most richly expansive versions in this genre. The figure in the present painting has been conceived on a grandly baroque scale; within its powerfully jagged silhouette, seen against the brilliant yellow background, the component forms angle and curve, undulate and jut forth. The artist pulled out all the stops with his resounding use of color, jarring contrasts alternate with more delicate harmonies. While Picasso returned to the musketeer theme frequently over the course of the next four years--including some the last drawings recorded in Zervos--no later sequence of variations on this subject matches this series in its formal variety and inventiveness, vivid palette, sustained dynamism and irrepressible joie de vivre.

The introduction of the pipe in this sequence contributes significantly to its overall character of boisterously good humor and contentment (fig. 5). Superficially, the pipe alludes to genre paintings of the 17th century Dutch school, and even more recent models, such as Eugène Manet's Le bon bock (Wildenstein, no. 213; coll. Philadelphia Museum of Art). The pipe was, more significantly, a meaningful motif within the context of Picasso's own oeuvre, aspects of which the artist was fond of revisiting in his late years. It was, of course, an important accessory in Picasso's famous Garçon à la pipe (Zervos, vol. 1, no. 274). The pipe was a frequent component in his cubist still-lifes. The manly recreation of pipe-smoking takes on a sexual connotation as well; with its exaggerated length the pipe becomes a phallic symbol. Picasso himself made the association between smoking and love-making as he was commiserating in a conversation with the photographer Brassaï: "Age has forced us to abandon smoking, but the desire remains. It's the same with love" (quoted in M.L.Bernadac, The Ultimate Picasso, New York, 2000, p. 455).

The presence of the yellow background, the pipe, and even the impassioned brushwork in this Mousquetaire suggest another artist--like Rembrandt, also a Dutchman--to whom Picasso liked to allude in his late paintings: Vincent van Gogh (fig. 6). His love for Rembrandt, Velázquez, Delacroix, Ingres, Manet and a handful of others notwithstanding, Picasso declared Van Gogh to be "the greatest of them all" (quoted in exh. cat., op. cit., 1988, p. 32). Apropos of the Van Gogh self-portrait illustrated here, John Richardson has noted the story told by Mme Parmelin about how "Picasso badgered the director of the the museum in Arles to get him a photostat of a press-cutting, the only documentary record of Van Gogh chopping off his ear and giving it to Rachel, the prostitute. He was going to frame it, he said" (ibid.). Richardson explained the nature of Van Gogh's influence on Picasso:

"What he wanted was to enlist Van Gogh's dark spirits on his side, to make his art as instinctive and 'convulsive' as possible I suspect that Picasso also wanted to galvanize his paint surface--not always the most thrilling aspect of the epoch before Jacqueline's--with some of the Dutchman's Dionysian fervour. It worked. The surface of the late paintings has a freedom, a plasticity, that was never there before; they are more spontaneous, more expressive and more instinctive than virtually all his previous work" (ibid., pp. 32 and 34). The musketeer paintings were the final major series of variations on a theme that Picasso undertook in his late period. This subject provided an opportunity to investigate two aspects of art-making that were foremost among Picasso's concerns during these final years: tradition and process. Regarding the former, the musketeers served a means through which Picasso could engage the great artists of the past whom he admired, allowing him to arrive at an understanding of his own position and achievement within the continuity and traditions of European painting. Having emerged from his study of Rembrandt, the musketeer theme also provided an avenue to further treating Velázquez, as well as tapping into the power and richness of the Siglo de Oro in Spanish painting. These sources encouraged Picasso to take stock of his españolismo, and the role of his native heritage in his work.

Moreover, the musketeers subject perfectly suited Picasso's work habits at this time. The artist was drawn to serial procedure, painting numerous variations on a theme, as an effective means of examining, assimilating and re-interpreting a subject, style or manner. Indeed, Picasso had become increasingly engaged in painting as "process", in which the act of painting, not the completed painting, was a sufficient end in itself. Picasso described how he took special pleasure in the "movement of the painting, the dramatic effort from one vision to the next, even if the effort is not carried through I have reached the stage where the movement of my thought interests me more than the thought itself" (quoted in K. Gallwitz, Picasso Laureatus, Paris, 1971, p. 166). In 1956 Picasso told Alexander Liberman, the editor of Vogue magazine, that "Paintings are but research and experiment. I never do a painting as a work of art. All of them are researches. I search incessantly and there is a logical sequence in all this research. That is why I number them. It's an experiment in time" (quoted in D. Ashton, ed., Picasso on Art, New York, 1972, p. 72).
The musketeer series was indeed an "experiment in time," and in more than one sense. It was a significant exercise in sequential imaging, as Picasso describes above. Moreover, this series was also a "journey into time," one that followed a route from Picasso's Mougins studio in the late twentieth century to Dumas' novel written in the mid-nineteeth, and then three centuries further into the past to the Baroque era of Rembrandt and Velázquez. As Picasso became very old and reclusive, and the real world of physical delight receded into the distance, an inner world without boundaries of time or place evolved in its stead. Picasso constructed a veritable musée imaginaire, an edifice that he maintained in his own mind of which he was artificer, arbiter and curator, that contained the genius of many centuries, as well as his own.


(fig. 1) Pablo Picasso, Rembrandt et Saskia, 13-14 March 1963. Private collection. BARCODE: 20627676

(fig. 2) Rembrandt van Rijn, Rembrandt and Saskia, circa 1635. Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Dresden. BARCODE: 206727669

(fig. 3) Pablo Picasso, Peintre et modèle, Mougins, 10 April 1966. Sold, Christie's, New York, 11 May 1995, lot 133. BARCODE: 26007304

(fig. 4) Pablo Picasso, Mousequetaire assis, Mougins, 19 April 1967. Sold, Christie's New York, 17 May 1983, lot 80.
BARCODE: 26007298

(fig. 5) Pablo Picasso, Homme à la pipe, Mougins, 7 November 1968. Sold. Christie's New York, 6 November 2007, lot 5. BARCODE: 25951882

(fig. 6) Vincent van Gogh, Self-Portrait with Bandaged Ear and Pipe, Arles, January 1889. Private collection. BARCODE: 26007281
(fig. 7) Diego de Silva Velázquez, Self-Portrait (detail from Las Meninas), 1656. Museo del Prado, Madrid. BARCODE: 20627652