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Picasso and the Avant-Garde in Paris – at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Pablo Picasso - Self-Portrait with Palette

Pablo Picasso
Self-Portrait with Palette (1906)
Philadelphia Museum of Art
© ARS (Artists Rights Society), New York / Estate of Pablo Picasso

Léger - The City

Fernand Léger
The City (1919)
Philadelphia Museum of Art
© ARS (Artists Rights Society), New York

Picasso and the Avant-Garde in Paris – at the Philadelphia Museum of Art

One of the most innovative and influential artists of the 20th century, Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881–1973) was at his most inventive between 1905 and 1945. The Philadelphia Museum of Art presents Picasso and the Avant-Garde in Paris surveying Picasso’s remarkable output during these years, from the pioneering role he played in the development of Cubism to his dialogue with Surrealism and other important art movements in the 1920s and 1930s.
February 24 – April 25, 2010)

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Source: Philadelphia Museum of Art
The exhibition also explores the pivotal role that the city of Paris played in the history of modern art, where artists from around the world made the French capital a center of innovation. It will include nearly 200 paintings, drawings, and sculptures by Picasso, Georges Braque, Juan Gris, Fernand Léger, Joan Miró, and many others, who collectively formed a vibrant, international avant-garde group that became known as the School of Paris.

Drawn from the Philadelphia Museum of Art’s extraordinary collection of paintings, sculptures, prints, and drawings by Picasso, and supplemented with loans from private American collections, this exhibition provides a unique opportunity to re-examine the remarkable burst of creativity that took place during one of the most revolutionary periods in the history of Western art. It includes a number of important works on paper, including collages which are rarely on display due to their inherent fragility and sensitivity to light, as well as important paintings that have not been on view in recent decades. Among the major works in the exhibition are Picasso’s bold Self-Portrait with Palette (1906) and Three Musicians, (1921), a grand summation of the artist’s almost decade-long exploration of Synthetic Cubism, Léger’s monumental Cubist masterpiece The City (1919), Jean Metzinger’s Tea Time (Woman with a Teaspoon) (1911), known in its day as “The Mona Lisa of Cubism,” Juan Gris’s Still Life Before an Open Window, Place Ravignan, which reveals the artist at the height of his powers, expertly balancing lyricism and geometric rigor in a composition of evocative spatial juxtapositions and luxurious color, and Marc Chagall’s lyrical and kaleidoscopic Half Past Three (The Poet) (1911).

In the spring of 1904, when the twenty-three year-old Picasso made the decision to move permanently to Paris, he had already established a reputation in his native Spain as a painter of exceptional ability. He plunged into the city’s bohemian community, soon establishing what would become lifelong friendships with a number of fellow artists and writers, including the French painter Georges Braque who would become his close collaborator in the development of Cubism. The exhibition will be chronologically arranged in order to show the rapid evolution of Picasso’s art during his time in Paris, starting with his early Self-Portrait with Palette (1906) in which the young painter unabashedly proclaims his artistic mastery. The next gallery will highlight the lively interchange between Picasso and Braque between 1910 and 1913, when they developed a shared vocabulary of grid-like scaffolding, overlapping planes, and a reduced palette of beige, ocher, white, and gray that marked the beginning of Cubism, as seen in Braque’s Still Life (Violin) and Picasso’s Man with a Guitar, both of 1912.

Although Picasso and Braque invented the new pictorial language of Cubism, with its flattened forms and multiple perspectives, artists such as Juan Gris and Fernand Léger soon made significant contributions of their own, especially to the development of what has come to be known as ‘Synthetic’ Cubism. One of the highlights of the exhibition will be a partial re-creation of the 1912 Salon d’Automne, where paintings by Gris, Albert Gleizes, and Metzinger were densely hung and interspersed with sculptures by Amedeo Modigliani, Jacques Lipchitz, and Raymond Duchamp-Villon.

Through the dramatic shifts in style and technique that marked these tumultuous years, Picasso continued to be a galvanizing force and an inspiration to the artists around him. The exhibition demonstrates the tremendous variety and consistently high quality of his work during this period, and brings to life the extraordinary atmosphere of early 20th century Paris and the lasting significance of the art created at this time.

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Picasso and the Avant-Garde in Paris - at the Philadelphia Museum of Art