Mini Cart

Sold Out

Pablo Picasso – Les Demoiselles d’Avignon

Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon is an original Lithograph on Arches paper.  It is signed, dedicated, and dated: “Pour mon bon ami Mourlot Fernand” – “Vallauris le 25.2.53.”  Printed by Mourlot, Paris.  Czwiklitzer 81.

This work is as uncomfortable to look at as it is impossible to look away from. No other image in the history of Western art so boldly, and baldly, confronts the viewer. Three of the five naked protagonists stare outward, trapping us with their gazes, just as the picture’s complicated space, populated by bodies that simultaneously press against and recede from its surface, draws us in. Pictorial conventions are banished and idealized notions of beauty jettisoned. The two rightmost figures’ masklike features are often connected to Picasso’s visit, midway through his work on the painting, to the Musée d’Ethnographie du Trocadéro in Paris—the city’s first anthropological museum. There he had an epiphanic encounter with African and Oceanic art, which influenced the work’s ferocious antinaturalism—the degree to which the depicted figures resist mimetic norms.

Picasso produced an unprecedented quantity of preparatory drawings and paintings for Demoiselles. They speak to his struggle to reinvent Western painting in his own stylistically disjunctive, spatially contradictory, aggressively confrontational terms. The title Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (The women of Avignon) was given to the work around the time of its first public exhibition. It alludes to the prostitutes of Barcelona’s red-light district and foregrounds the psychosexual dimension and erotic content that conjoin with Demoiselles’s explosive form and fuel its continued ability to shock.

Title

Les Demoiselles d’Avignon

Alt. Title

The women of Avignon

Medium

Lithograph

Year

1953

Signature

Signed, dedicated, dated

Catalogue Raisonné

Czwiklitzer 81

Size 29.5 x 22 (in)
75 x 56 (cm)
Price SOLD
Enquire About This Item
Category:

Description

Pablo Picasso, Les Demoiselles d’Avignon is an original Lithograph on Arches paper.  It is signed, dedicated, and dated: “Pour mon bon ami Mourlot Fernand” – “Vallauris le 25.2.53.”  Printed by Mourlot, Paris.  Czwiklitzer 81.

This work is as uncomfortable to look at as it is impossible to look away from. No other image in the history of Western art so boldly, and baldly, confronts the viewer. Three of the five naked protagonists stare outward, trapping us with their gazes, just as the picture’s complicated space, populated by bodies that simultaneously press against and recede from its surface, draws us in. Pictorial conventions are banished and idealized notions of beauty jettisoned. The two rightmost figures’ masklike features are often connected to Picasso’s visit, midway through his work on the painting, to the Musée d’Ethnographie du Trocadéro in Paris—the city’s first anthropological museum. There he had an epiphanic encounter with African and Oceanic art, which influenced the work’s ferocious antinaturalism—the degree to which the depicted figures resist mimetic norms.

Picasso produced an unprecedented quantity of preparatory drawings and paintings for Demoiselles. They speak to his struggle to reinvent Western painting in his own stylistically disjunctive, spatially contradictory, aggressively confrontational terms. The title Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (The women of Avignon) was given to the work around the time of its first public exhibition. It alludes to the prostitutes of Barcelona’s red-light district and foregrounds the psychosexual dimension and erotic content that conjoin with Demoiselles’s explosive form and fuel its continued ability to shock.

Additional information

Title

Les Demoiselles d’Avignon

Alt. Title

The women of Avignon

Medium

Lithograph

Year

1953

Signature

Signed, dedicated, dated

Catalogue Raisonné

Czwiklitzer 81

Size 29.5 x 22 (in)
75 x 56 (cm)
Price SOLD