Pablo Picasso:
Picture "L`Espagnole (Portrait de Jacqueline en Carmen)" (1965)
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Picture "L`Espagnole (Portrait de Jacqueline en Carmen)" (1965)
Pablo Picasso:
Picture "L`Espagnole (Portrait de Jacqueline en Carmen)" (1965)

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limited, 50 copies | numbered | signed | linoleum cut on Arches paper | framed | size 68 x 58 cm

Collector's tip
Product no. IN-878352.R1
Picture "L`Espagnole (Portrait de Jacqueline en Carmen)" (1965)
Pablo Picasso: Picture "L`Espagnole (Portrait de Jacqueli...

Detailed description

Picture "L`Espagnole (Portrait de Jacqueline en Carmen)" (1965)

In 1939 Picasso cut his first linoleum cut in fast, curving lines. For the time being, this was to remain his only work using this graphic technique until 1951. In 1951, Picasso's interest in this letterpress technique, which was often used for advertising prints and posters at the time, was rekindled. The heyday of his interest in the linoleum cut was between 1954 and 1963 when he produced a total of 150 works. In addition, with the so-called "lost plate", which is attributed to the artist, he developed a completely new technique with which multi-coloured prints could be cut from one plate. His wife Jacqueline often posed for him. Picasso transformed her classically beautiful face into expressive portraits that combined her profile and the frontal view of her face in a cubist manner. In 1962, Picasso produced a fifteen-part series of three-coloured linoleum cuts in black, brown and beige, showing Jacqueline with changing headgear, hats, hair ribbons and wreaths of flowers. In this portrait, Picasso depicts his wife as Spanish. Jacqueline is wearing a black mantilla, a lace veil that is part of the traditional Spanish festive costume, the colour black being reserved for married women. Her hair is tied at her neck and adorned with a flower. Picasso transformed her prominent eyebrows and eyelashes into floral arabesques. This is a rarely beautiful work, which is now part of the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Multicoloured linoleum cuts by Picasso in this state of preservation are very hard to find today and fetch top prices on the art market - a sheet with a collector's quality.

Original linoleum cut, 1962. Edition: 50 copies on Arches paper, numbered and signed by hand. Motif size 35 x 27 cm. Sheet size 62 x 43 cm. Size in frame 68 x 58 cm as shown.

Portrait of the artist Pablo Picasso

About Pablo Picasso

1881-1973 - Artist of the century from Spain

"Painting is stronger than me, it makes me do it's bidding." (Pablo Picasso)

At 12, he could already paint like Raphael; at 20, no university professor was able to convey him new further insight into art. Pablo Picasso died at the age of 91 and left behind an extensive oeuvre of over 40,000 works - and the certainty that he was the most important artist of the 20th century.

Pablo Ruiz Picasso (25 Oct. 1881 Málaga - 8 April 1973 Mougins) spent his life searching for new means of artistic expression. He always combined endless ingenuity with courage for radical innovations. His work presents modern art in ever new forms with incomparable versatility: lively, multifaceted and stimulating. Yet Picasso's art always remains representational: women, harlequins, flamenco guitars, peace doves and black bulls: Whatever his eye captured - it is and remains imbued with Picasso's irresistible charisma.

Moreover, his work never ceases to inspire because it cannot be narrowed into one single style, it remains versatile and surprising. "Down with style! Does God have a style? He made the guitar, the harlequin, the dachshund, the cat, the owl, the dove. Like me. The elephant and the whale – fine – but the elephant and the squirrel? A real hodgepodge! He made what doesn‘t exist. Me too."

After Picasso had his first solo exhibition in Barcelona at the age of 19, he was drawn to Paris, the art metropolis of the turn of the century. He quickly became a rising artist and a famous celebrity. In the beginning, he was known for his Blue and Pink Period. Inspired by the art of the primitive people, he and Georges Braque then developed a new revolutionary art, Cubism. In the 1920s, his motifs became monumental and classicising. Subsequently, his contact with the Surrealists also had an impact on his works. He then reached his artistic peak with the mural Guernica, which was created under the impression of the Spanish Civil War. After the Second World War, he moved to the south of France and devoted himself in particular to lithography and ceramics.

His pictorial inventions are reflection of his own life. The main themes in his monumental oeuvre are his partners and children as well as bullfighting, which he was passionate about throughout his whole life. Picasso not only portrayed himself in numerous variations, but also historical painters such as Degas, Manet or Toulouse-Lautrec.

Pablo Ruiz Picasso was inspired by every material and every technique to create new works of art: Wax crayon, oil on canvas, silk, sculptures, ceramics - the versatility of the great Spanish artist was overwhelming.

Picasso's artist colleague Max Ernst once said: "... No one can compete with him, he is the genius." This verdict by the great Surrealist underlines how uniquely important Picasso is in the history of 20th-century art.

The auction of the legacy of Picasso's long-time partner Dora Maar was the great Parisian auction event of the end of the last century. The collection, which is unparalleled, garnered record bidding and prices. Especially high was the demand for Picasso's drawings, which went far beyond the scope of estimates. Dora Maar once said of Picasso: "When the women in his life change, everything else changes too, the house, the favourite poet, the circle of friends, the style." Throughout his life, he sought constantly means of expression through a wide variety of artistic means.

Even today, high-profile exhibitions all over the world are attracting record numbers of visitors, which testifies his undisputed success.

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