拍品专文
Ancient myths and deities, fauns and satyrs appear frequently in Picasso's art, starting with his classical period in the late 1910s and 1920s. They tended to surface at times of domestic happiness, and early 1933 was just such a time. His clandestine affair with Marie—Thérèse Walter was at its most intense, providing as it did a welcome distraction to the brooding presence of his wife, Olga. The situation prompted one of those bursts of creativity which punctuate Picasso’s career. On this occasion it was the monotype—a mercurial technique involving painting with viscous inks on a shiny surface - which became the focus of his almost maniacal energy. The experiments began slowly in summer 1932 at the recently purchased Château Boisgeloup near Gisors, but gained momentum shortly after the turn of the year in Paris, where the results were photographed in situ by Brassaï. Between January and March 1933 he created over 120 works, of which twelve (including the present work) were produced on a single day—16th February.
The monotype process lends itself to the creation of series of related designs, as the artist can work quickly, using traces of the previous image as a guide. Picasso employed the technique in tandem with drypoint and etching, transferring images and ideas from one to the other and back again, every stage an evolution. Clearly these agile jumps between monotype and etching or monotype and drypoint must have inspired him, such was the prodigious output.
Of the corpus he made during the spring of 1933 fully half of them depict a flutist and reclining woman, in varying degrees of abstraction. Whilst clearly related, Jeune flûtiste dans un bosquet is one of a small number depicting a single figure, and is one of only nine executed in color during this entire period. It is believed to be the only one of its type in private hands, the rest held in the Picasso Museum, Paris.
As with other creative storms—such as his infatuation with linocut 25 years later—his passion for the technique soon burned itself out. Despite his obvious facility with the medium, monotypes had virtually disappeared from his repertoire by the summer, rarely to return.
The monotype process lends itself to the creation of series of related designs, as the artist can work quickly, using traces of the previous image as a guide. Picasso employed the technique in tandem with drypoint and etching, transferring images and ideas from one to the other and back again, every stage an evolution. Clearly these agile jumps between monotype and etching or monotype and drypoint must have inspired him, such was the prodigious output.
Of the corpus he made during the spring of 1933 fully half of them depict a flutist and reclining woman, in varying degrees of abstraction. Whilst clearly related, Jeune flûtiste dans un bosquet is one of a small number depicting a single figure, and is one of only nine executed in color during this entire period. It is believed to be the only one of its type in private hands, the rest held in the Picasso Museum, Paris.
As with other creative storms—such as his infatuation with linocut 25 years later—his passion for the technique soon burned itself out. Despite his obvious facility with the medium, monotypes had virtually disappeared from his repertoire by the summer, rarely to return.