Opening on 26 September 2019, from 19:00 to 23:00 Press preview: Thursday 26 September 2019, from 15:30 to 16:30 On view until 6 January 2020 Collection Galleries, Level 1
Picasso et la famille explores Pablo Picasso’s (1881-1973) relationship to the notion of the family nucleus, encompassing everything from motherhood to children’s games, from the representation of conceptual intimacy to the numerous experiences of a fatherhood spent under the spotlight. Bringing together draw- ings, etchings, paintings, and sculptures, the exhibition spans seventy-seven years of creation, from 1895 to 1972, through a selection of works marking notable moments in the artist’s long emotional and family life, whose variety of forms illustrates the constant reinvention of his artistic vocabulary. For Picasso, the word “family” evokes, first and foremost, its Spanish meaning of a restricted, intimate and discreet circle, and a fertile source of inspiration for developing themes such as the love of femininity, the image of the couple, the mysteries of childhood, the simple pleasure of sharing, and the solemnity of private moments. Yet the family is also a means to explore even more universal themes such as the cruelty of war and the passing of time, and to reflect on the history of art and its motifs. Through this lens, theoeuvre of the Spanish master appears in a particular light, independent of periods and styles, rather evoking an immediacy of creation.
This exhibition is organized with the exceptional support of the Musée national Picasso-Paris in the framework of “Picasso-Méditerranée,” and with the collaboration of the Lebanese Ministry of Culture.
With the generous contribution of Danièle Edgar de Picciotto and the support of Cyril Karaoglan.
Exhibition curators: Camille Frasca (Art historian, Project manager at the Musée national Picasso-Paris) and Yasmine Chemali (Head of Collections, Sursock Museum)
Exhibition design: Jacques Aboukhaled Exhibition graphics: Mind the gap Lighting: Joe Nacouzi
Picasso-Méditerranée, an initiative from Musée national Picasso-Paris
“Picasso-Méditerranée” is an international cultural event which is held from Spring 2017 to Spring 2019. Over sixty cultural institutions have come together to conjure up a programme around the work “obstiné- ment méditerranéenne” of Pablo Picasso. Initiated by the Musée national Picasso-Paris, this journey into the creation of the artist and across the places which inspired him, aims at strengthening ties between all the shores.
The Sursock Museum’s involvement in “Picasso-Méditerranée” is born from the will of Laurent Le Bon, the president of the Musée national Picasso-Paris, who who wanted Lebanon to be part of the Picasso- Méditerranée, and viewed the Sursock Museum as the ideal partner.
Picasso et la famille could only be realized thanks to the generous contribution of Danièle Edgar de Picciotto and the support of Cyril Karaoglan. De Picciotto wished, by this generous contribution, to honor the memory of her husband Edgar, a great collector and art lover, who was very attached to the cultural exchanges between Lebanon and France.
Origins
Pablo Picasso was fourteen years old in 1895 when he painted The barefoot girl. In the same year, his sister Concepción died of diphtheria. Although far from an ordinary family portrait, the painter’s depth of feeling and meticulousness in his representation of the destitute street child are easily discernible. The more intimate drawing of the artist’s mother and his other sister, Lola, is an ode to an adolescent Picasso’s affection for the women in his life.
Gentleness turns to melancholy in the drawing of two unknown female figures and a child from the artist’s blue period. Following Picasso’s arrival in Paris in October 1900 around his nineteenth birthday, a seminal period in the life of the artist began, lasting six years, during which he forged his artistic identity between Paris and Spain, between the painters of the 19th century whom he studied and the modernity that surrounded him. Several mother and child compositions and numerous families populate his paintings, drawings, and etchings of the time; sensuality and tenderness alternate with the sadness and poverty of the lives of the subjects portrayed, including street entertainers, circus performers, and inhabitants of ill-famed suburbs.
In 1921 and at forty years old, Picasso was in his prime. Married from 1918 to the Ballets Russes dancer Olga Kokhlova, the artist became a father for the first time that year with the birth of Paulo. The two figures –brothers or friends– studying a letter whose content seems to thurst them into a melancholy, meditative state, are surely an autobiographical reflection of a pensive Picasso, experimenting with a new phase in his personal and artistic life. In that year, the artist also produced numerous mother and child paintings depicting Olga and Paulo, whose forms draw on ancient sculptures seen during a visit to Italy in 1917, and originate in the Synthetic Cubist ideas developed in the 1910s.
Tumults
In 1927, Picasso met Marie-Thérèse Walter, who was to inspire works by the artist imbued with refer- ences to sexuality and fertility, and prompt the emergence of a formal vocabulary composed of curved and sinuous lines. Picasso, who was still married to Olga, experienced the tumults of married life divided between his everyday family and artistic activities and adulterous passion, the former in Paris and at Boisgeloup in Normandy where he purchased a castle in 1930, and the latter on the beaches of Brittany and in the south of France, where he went whenever possible. The minute – but nevertheless impressive – sculpture in wood dating to 1930 shows a return to primitivist iconography, whilst depicting with great skill the sensual fusion of two beings. The Bust of a woman painted in 1931 reflects the artist’s obsession with the curves of the female body. Marie-Thérèse was soon to bear him a child: Maya, born in 1935.
The “cruel and tragic tensions” which for Pierre Daix, a historian and friend of Picasso, characterized this period, led the artist to work intensively in the 1930s and produce many sculptures. Boisgeloup Castle became the nerve centre for this work, the studio where all the forms accumulated, until a sudden nine- month hiatus between May 1935 and February 1936.
In 1936, Picasso began a friendship with Dora Maar. Marie-Thérèse and Maya became the family haven, and Dora, the coveted woman. Picasso painted in turns the portrait of the two women, one recognisable from her blonde hair, the other from her black hair and painted fingernails.
At the time, Picasso was concerned by the political situation in Spain, and closely followed the unfolding events. Numerous Weeping women were painted by the artist. War, which haunts the work of Picasso, alternated with images of the women he loved. Guernica, painted in 1937, is a chilling depiction of families torn apart, overcome by terror and pain. The anguish of losing loved ones alongside the violence of news reports arriving daily in the press led Picasso to select subjects evoking both innocence and cruelty, such as cats lying in wait or devouring birds, worried children, and still life works blending fruit and skulls.
Games
From 1943, as the war in France entered its final phase, Picasso’s work no longer spoke of the terror of the preceding years. In May 1943, he met the painter Françoise Gilot in Paris, and gradually built a new life with her. They sojourned several times in the south of France before finally settling in Vallauris in 1948.
The family circle, extended by the birth of Claude in 1947 and Paloma in 1949, became for both Picasso and Gilot a major subject of representation. More than a fresh iconography, the presence of children led the artist in search of spontaneity, tenderness, and humor, through a closer look at their creations. In 1946, he even said, “At 12 years old I could paint like Raphael, but it took me a whole lifetime to learn to paint like a child.”
Making toys from all kinds of materials found in his studio just as he had previously done for Paulo and Maya, Picasso even integrated them into his assemblage sculptures. The figure of the pregnant woman became recurrent in a series of sculptures produced between 1948 and 1951.
During this period, Picasso actively played the role of head of the family. Many of his creations reflect a man enamored of fatherhood and touched by the daily life of mother and child, such as Mother and children playing (14 June 1951), and several portraits of Claude and Paloma produced between 1949 and 1953. The constant energy he felt during the period can be seen in his depiction of playful children and his use of cheerful colors and curved lines. The paintings are family-themed, presenting in turn moments of play, arts and crafts, and interior domestic life. Picasso continued this iconography after Françoise’s departure in 1953, notably in a series of the children drawing with their mother.
Fictional families
Picasso met Jacqueline Roque at the Madoura studio in Vallauris. After his separation from Françoise, the couple moved into La California villa in Cannes in 1955, then married in 1961 at the Vallauris town hall. Picasso entered a new, intensive phase of work, which was initially heavily mediatized in Cannes, then more solitary at Mas Notre-Dame de Vie in Mougins.
In Mougins, Picasso painted the series of canvases exhibited here, dating from between 1969 and 1972, presenting an assortment of characters, some fictional.
The families painted by Picasso at that time were those of his gardener, of the engraver Piero Crommelynck with whom he had been working for many years, but also Ingresque, Balzacian or mythological families inspired by the artist’s varied viewings and readings.
The mother and child paintings take the form of pagan Madonnas, whose children are born of mightily sensual embraces, painted on several occasions on large canvases. The family thus reflects a romantic sensuality, an almost religious attachment between beings, and a phenomenon so moving that it continued to touch the artist into the last years of his life.
The large paintings of Picasso’s final years are a true ode to the spontaneity of childhood, whose sparing means contribute to an illustration of simplicity. Nearing his ninetieth year, the artist reflected on the relationship to novelty and the quest for simplicity in art. In The painter and the child, the child overpowers the old man, symbolizing for Picasso the eternal renewal of painting. Picasso had said to the poet Rafael
Alberti: “I am him. In awe of everything. I am not the painter –it was him, the child, that painted me.” (Picasso, le rayon ininterrompu; Paris, Cercle d’art, 1974)
Pablo Picasso
Maternité [Motherhood], Mougins, 30 August 1971 Oil on canvas, 162 × 130 cm Musée national Picasso-Paris Dation Pablo Picasso, 1979. MP226 © RMN-Grand Palais / Adrien Didierjean © Succession Picasso 2019
Presented at the Avignon exhibition of 1973, this is Picasso’s last work on the theme of motherhood. Adopting the traditional composition of a mother seated face-on, holding her child in her lap, the painting unfolds its splendour in a timeless, undefined space. Through its imposing size, the mother becomes an icon, recalling the motif of the Virgin under the apple tree, medieval iconography evoking the temptation
to which Adam and Eve succumbed, the fall of man, and the original sin that Christ came to redeem. The presence of this religious evocation is intriguing, seemingly more associated with a reflection on the origin of man and the world and a meditation offered by the artist, whose impressive, spirited touch and rhythmically-free composition characterize the “relaxed” effect of the final work.