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[프랑스 여행37]피카소 박물관 4편(큐비즘과 초현실주의 & 클라시즘 풍의 작품들)

by Helen of Troy 2018. 3. 20.




Jeanne 

by P. Picasso, Paris, 1901

oil on canvas

 

 



Tete de femme, de profil (여성의 두상, 프로파일)

by Picasso, Paris, Feb. 1905

graphite





Les Amants (연인들)

by Picasso, Paris, Aug. 1904

pen and ink





La Celestine (La femme a la taie)

by Picasso, Barcelone, March 1904

oil on canvas





Cubism


In 1906, Pablo Picasso spent the summer at Gosol, a small village

in the Spanish Pyrenees, and embarked on a crucial change of his work.

Subsquently, and until the 1907 masterpiece the Demoiselles d'Avignon,

the artist was interested almost exclusively in the female body.

He dedicated many works to it, characterised by his abandonment of illusionist

processes in favour of a new expressive language: construction through

the articulation of fundamental forms and the use of shading inspired

by African art....  From 1908, the cubism that Picasso invented,

with Georges Braque in "tow", formed the basis for much of the art

of the 20th century.  It consisted of a preliminary Cezanne phase(1908-1909),

marked by the open shapes and geometry of Paul Cezanne's paintings,

a second, almost abstract and so-called "analytical' phase(1910-1911)

based on greater decompositon of shapes and, finally, a third mixed phase

launched in 1912 with the appearance of papiers colles and objects.

Braque and Picasso endeavoured to portray things not as they appeared

to the eye but as they appeared to the mind.







Violon et bouteille sur une table

by Picasso, Paris, 1915 Autume





Le Sacre-Coeur

by Picasso, Paris, 1909-1910 Winter

oil on canvas





Tete d'jomme

by Picasso, Paris, 1909 Spring

pastel on wood





Nature morte a la bouteille

by Georges Braque, 1910-1911

oil on canvas





Verre, pomme, livres

by Picasso, Paris, 1911 spring

oil on canvas





Homme a la cheminee

by Picasso, Paris, 1916

oil on canvas





 




 

 

 Classicism


After the exhibition of these works at the Galerie Paul Rosenberg in Paris in 1919,

Pablo Picasso moved to a new style of painting and lifestyle.

Indeed, after his marriage in 1918 to the Russian ballerina Olga Khonkhlove,

who he had met in Rome while he was working on the ballet Parade,

he left his Bohemian lifestyle for a more upmarket existence.

The artist returned to studying the great masters of art history,

from Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres to Auguste Renoir, and a clear and pure

classical line.  Other European artists would follow him; this was the

'return to order' after the slaughter of the Great War which physically

and ideologically decimated the artistic avant-gardes.  While travelling with the

Ballets Russes in Italy in 1917, Picasso had seen the Raphaels of the Vatican

and the masterpieces of Antiquity, these led to depictions of nudes

and sculptural figures clad in classical drapery in a timeless atmosphere.

However, the artist broke with the model of idealised representation,

its powerful figures became massive, particularly at Fontainblear

during the summer of 1921, influenced by the mannerist painter of the

French Renaissance, Primaticcio.


 

 





La Lecture de la lettre

by Picasso, Paris, 1921

oil on canvas





La Danse villageoise

by Picasso, Paris, 1922

pastel and oil on canvas





Deux Femmes courant sur la plage (La course)

by Picasso,  Dinard, 1922 Summer

Gouache on plywood





 


 

 

 Surrealism


Pablo Picasso never claimed to be a surrealist.  However, by offering

an alternative to the illusionist imitation of reality, the inventor of cubism prepared

 the possibilities for the movement theorised in 1924 by Andre Pretons' Surrealist Manifesto

 and embarked on the parallel experimentation processes.  Thus, even before

the surrealists had adopted the definition of bearuty given by Lautreamont in 1868

in Les Chants de Maldoror ('beautiful as the chance encounter of a sewing machine

and an umbrella on an operating tale'), Picasso was using discarded objects in his painting.

From 1926, he was quick to break the rules of this technique by incorporating

a floorcloth, rope and nails into his Guitar.  A long way from the disturbing strangeness

of this work of rare aggressiveness, the sand compositions of summer 1930

developed a more poetic version of this art of assembling in which the diverse range

of objects and materials found on the beach merge and impose disorder

on the observer's gaze.  According to Breton, this placement of bizarre

or contradictory elements fuelled the "interminable gestation" of the work of art.


 

 


Visage aux deux profils

by Picasso,  Juan-les-Pins,  1903 Aug. 14

Sable teinte par endroits sur revers de toile et chassis, 

carton colle et cousu sur toile






Baigneuse couchee

by Picasso,  Juan-les-Pins,  1903 Aug 20

Sable teinte par endroits sur revers de toile et chassis, objets, ficelle 

et  caron colles et cousus sur toile






Paysage aux bateaux

by Picasso,  Juan-les-Pins,  1930 Aug 28





Guitare

by Picasso,  Paris,  1926 spring

Cordes, papier journal, serpilliere et clous sur toile peinte






Guitare

by Picasso,  Paris,  1927 Apr 27

oil and pastel on canvas






Guitare

by Picasso,  Paris,  1926 April





Guitare

by Picasso,  Paris,  1926 May 1





Guitare 

by Picasso,  Paris 1926 spring





Guiatre

by Picasso, 1926 May 

 












War Time


From 1930-1940, the theme of death engulfed all of Pablo Picasso's work.

In addition to th eanxiety caused by the potical situation, he suffered personal

sorrow with the death of his mother Maria in early 1939.

Afraid of being harassed by the regime that denied him French nationality

in 1940.  Picasso shut himself away and lived as a recluse from Parisian artistic life

until 1941.  The threat was reflected in the production of universal allegories,


which did not refer to a specific political event but served as Momento Mori,

a pictorial genre designed to remind mankind of its mortality.

Alongside the vanitas, a classic motif of this reflection on the transience of lie,

many woman in armchair paintings, through the evolution in their treatment,

reflected all the tension of these dark years.  Deformed bodies, increasingly disjointed

members, sharp lines, the pattern of stripes or grid lines and njted or garish tones

transposed the imprisonment and psychological violence suffered  by the civilian

populations into paintings and engravings.






Femme assise aux bras croises

Le Tremblay-sur-Mauldre,  1937

Huile sur toile






Portrait de Dora Maar

by Picasso,  Paris, Nov. 23, 1937

Huile sur toile





Portrait de Dora Maar

by Picasso,  Paris,  Oct. 1, 1937

Huile et pastel sur toile







 




L'Artiste devant sa toile

by Picasso,  Paris,  Mar. 22, 1938

Fusain sur toile






Portrait de Marie-Therese

by Picasso,  Paris, Jan 6, 1937

Huile sur toile






La Suppliante

by Picasso,  Paris, Dec 18, 1937






Page de titre de l'album Picault: <<Picasso, l'atelier du Fournas, les annees 50, Vallauris>>

by Robert Picault, 1950



 



Fumees a Vallauris

by Picasso,  Vallauris, Jan 12, 1951

Huile sur toile

















La Liseuse

by Picasso,  Vallauris, Jan. 29, 1953

Huile sur contreplaque


 

 



Couple

by Picasso,  Mougins,  Oct. 30, 1967

Huile sur toile


 




창문을 통해서 비가 내리는 박물관 앞 정원의 모습 역시 한 폭의 그림같다.






Le Matador

by Picasso, Mougins,  Oct. 4, 1970

Huile sur toile






2017년 6월 30일에...