
Show visitors in Paris.
Courtesy AP
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| REVIEWS |
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| WORKS |
- Selected
Works from the show can be viewed here
and here
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| LOCATION |
- The
show was presented in Paris
at the "Galerie Nationale du Jeu de Paume", and it finished a run at theMusée des Beaux Arts in Montreal, Canada in 2001. It was then
moved to the Museu
Picasso in Barcelona, Spain where it ran from
Oct 25 2001 to January 25, 2002.
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The Picasso Érotique show
has attracted hundreds of thousans of visitors worldwide. At
left are the details of the show and the critical reaction, while
below is an essay about the show itself, courtesy of the Montreal
Museum of Fine Arts, which hosted the show in 2001.
The selection of more than 350 works
- many rarely, if ever, exhibited publicly before due to reasons of
censorship - spans the artist's entire career and includes paintings,
prints and drawings, sculpture and ceramics. Together, these reveal
the profound, persistent and remarkably varied role that erotic imagery,
ideas and experiences played in Picasso's work - from the bordello
scenes of his youth in Barcelona to the epochal Les Demoiselles d'Avignon
(sketches for which are included in the exhibition) and the nudes
he produced at the age of ninety. As Picasso himself once stated,
when asked about his views on art and sexuality, "They're the
same thing."
Garnered from more than forty public and private collections worldwide,
the exhibition features erotic works representative of virtually all
the phases and styles of Picasso's career. Drawn from personal experience,
imagination, mythology and earlier art, these images - by turns humorous
and melancholic, enraptured and enraged - explore an almost encyclopedic
range of sexual impulses, practices and human desire.
"Given the enormity of Picasso's oeuvre and influence, it is
remarkable that up to now there has been no full-scale, major museum
exhibition devoted to the central importance of erotic subject matter
in his art," stated Museum Director Guy Cogeval. "Fascinating
and often stunningly beautiful in and of themselves, these works will
provide a long-overdue contribution to our understanding of the greatest
artist of the twentieth century - and, indeed, of the nature of the
artistic process and of creativity itself. It is most appropriate
that this historic exhibition should take place at the Montreal Museum
of Fine Arts, which in the past has hosted such important displays
of Picasso's work as Picasso and Man (1964) and Pablo Picasso: Meeting
in Montreal, organized in collaboration with Jacqueline Picasso, the
artist's last wife."

The Exhibition
As Picasso's numerous biographers - and the artist himself - have
confirmed, sex and the women in his life had an enormous influence
on his work. Indeed, the painter's rapid and often dramatic changes
of style are frequently attributed to the presence of a new love interest,
the waning of an old one, or both. While the autobiographical character
of Picasso's erotic art is undeniable, such subjects also served as
a means of exploring - and challenging - the very nature of art and
its role in society.
Organized chronologically and thematically, the exhibition is divided
into three successive phases of Picasso's career: "The Early
Years", "Between the Wars" and "Maturity",
each of which is subdivided into particular motifs or projects that
figured prominently in his erotic oeuvre. At various points in the
exhibition, there are also viewing areas for film excerpts related
to Picasso's erotic imagery.
The Early Years: The Brothels of Barcelona
Picasso érotique opens, appropriately enough, with an installation
evoking a fin-de-siècle brothel - the setting both for many
of the painter's earliest sexual exploits and for his first large
body of erotic drawings. An adjacent gallery displays a number of
these works, most of them depicting the prostitutes and patrons of
Barcelona's notorious barrio chino, or red-light district, which the
young Picasso and his fellow artist friends frequented during the
late 1890s and early 1900s. Drawn in a linear, almost caricaturist
style reminiscent of Toulouse-Lautrec, many of these are graphic and
often grotesquely humorous depictions of various sex acts, clearly
designed to amuse and titillate. The Mackerel (1902-1903), for example,
shows a nude woman with a long-tongued fish between her legs. There
are also poetic and quite lyrical scenes of lovemaking from this period,
such as Embrace (1901) and Two Figures and a Cat (1902-1903), as well
as the disturbing image of a nude woman in bed being strangled by
a man.
Produced at a time when Picasso was being encouraged to concentrate
on historical and religious subjects (one of his first public successes,
produced at age sixteen, was a solemn allegory entitled Science and
Charity), these brothel sketches may have then seemed incidental to
his developing career. However, many of the images first treated in
these works - the embrace, the kiss, the artist gazing at his slumbering
lover, violation, and death - would eventually become central themes
in Picasso's oeuvre, reprised again and again until the end of his
life.
This section also includes one of the precocious artist's earliest
drawings of any kind, a sketch of a donkey mounting a she-ass, jotted
in the margins of a school notebook when Picasso was about twelve.
The Early Years: Paris and Les Demoiselles d'Avignon
The following galleries document the importance of erotic subjects
during the crucial period from 1904, when Picasso moved to Paris,
to the completion, in the spring of 1907, of Les Demoiselles d'Avignon,
a depiction of five prostitutes that is regarded as one of the most
important paintings in the history of modern art.
La Toilette, a major painting of 1906, shows a nude woman standing
before a mirror and arranging her hair. The classical pose, sculptural
form and overall dignity and restraint of the work reflect Picasso's
new fascination with Greco-Roman art - and, perhaps, with his new
mistress, Fernande Olivier. Often regarded as Picasso's first "true
love", this statuesque and elegant Frenchwoman was the model
for numerous works, erotic and otherwise, of the early 1900s. In The
Harem, a more overtly erotic painting of 1906, Fernande appears in
a variety of graceful, classically inspired nude poses, while a powerfully
built nude man, seated languorously in the foreground, looks on. In
retrospect, the work can be seen as an early step towards Les Demoiselles
d'Avignon.
The exhibition features a number of important studies for this revolutionary
masterpiece. Among them is a compositional drawing for Les Demoiselles
of March-April 1907, which differs from the final version in the inclusion
of two men, one entering a door, the other seated amid the group of
nude women. The presence of these men, both fully clothed, confirms
that the subject of this painting, for all its violent distortions
of form and space, is a group of prostitutes in a brothel greeting
prospective customers.
Between the Wars
The exhibition then proceeds to show the myriad and increasingly sophisticated
forms that Picasso's erotic oeuvre took during the decades leading
up to World War II.
A number of erotic works dating from the late 1920s and early 1930s
reflect his interest in Surrealism, which advocated the reconstruction
of nature according to one's imaginative fantasies. For Picasso, these
fantasies were often of a sexual nature - "Why not the sex organs
in place of the eyes, and the eyes between the legs?" he once
wondered - and the result is a series of hybrid and often playfully
erotic creatures. In Figures by the Seashore (1931), for example,
some protuberances and orifices are anatomically recognizable, some
are not; but collectively the entwining forms are an eloquent expression
of sexual union. In addition to drawings and paintings, the exhibition
also includes a number of sculptures dating from the artist's Surrealist
phase, including The Couple (1930), Head of a Woman (1931) and Bather
(1931).
The next section of the exhibition is devoted to the important group
of erotic works Picasso produced at Boisgeloup, the house he bought
in 1930 as a studio and trysting place for his new love, Marie-Thérèse
Walter. Some twenty-nine years his junior, she provided the artist
- now almost fifty and in the last stages of his unhappy marriage
to the Russian ballerina Olga Kokhlova ("the castrator")
- with a new sexual and artistic lease on life.
In such paintings as Siesta (1932) and Recumbent Nude (1932) Marie-Thérèse's
sleeping form is painted in voluptuous sweeping curves and flat areas
of gay colors. In the somewhat later Nude in a Garden (1934) - described
as one of the ultimate artistic expressions of sexual joy - her body
is abstracted and rearranged according to his desire, becoming a series
of delicately painted pink breasts and orifices.
This section also includes selections from Picasso's series of illustrations
to Ovid's Metamorphoses (begun in 1930 at Boisgeloup) and other mythologically
inspired scenes of pursuit, seduction and rape. His personal mythologizing
of himself as the Minotaur, a lascivious half-human, bison-headed
monster, figures prominently in a number of these works, such as Dora
and the Minotaur. Dated September 1936, a few months after the beginning
of his relationship with the photographer Dora Maar, it shows the
shaggy beast preparing to bury his muzzle in his nude victim's pudenda.
Maturity
The erotic works produced during the last decades of Picasso's life
- a time when the artist enjoyed a celebrity unmatched in the annals
of modern art - often reflect an increasing awareness of his own mortality
and the inevitable waning of his sexual powers. Many of these are
self-mocking and broadly humorous, such as collages in which a drawn
image of a knock-kneed old man with glasses and a beret ogles and
fondles photographs of pinup girls cut from magazines (1957). (Indeed,
the tabloid press had made much of his liaison with the young painter
Françoise Gilot, begun when he sixty-two and she was twenty-one).
Similarly humorous in tone, but very different in source, are the
group of ceramics (1962) with crudely painted images of aging "excited"
satyrs in pursuit of fleeing nymphs, clearly intended as caricatures
of erotic scenes on Greek vase painting.
The exhibition also features a number of works from one of the artist's
most famous and extensive projects of erotic art, Suite 347 (1968),
a series of risqué prints dealing with the imagined sex lives
of great artists of the past. A group of approximately twenty-five
etchings depict the Renaissance master Raphael cavorting with his
mistress "La Fornarina", often with the decrepit Pope Julius
II as a goggle-eyed voyeur. In a similar vein is the selection of
prints from Picasso's 1971 series - again, imaginary - of Degas visiting
a Paris brothel.
In late paintings such as The Kiss (1969) and The Embrace (1971),
a gift to the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts from Jacqueline Picasso,
Picasso reprises themes and images that had informed the erotic art
of earlier years. Now, however, the contours are often jagged and,
in the oils, the paint is thick and applied with a new expressive
urgency. The exhibition concludes with one of Picasso's last drawings,
an image of a nude woman dated 1972, the year before his death at
the age of ninety-one. A work of enormous pathos and power, it depicts
a grotesquely aged woman, with sagging breasts and elephantine legs,
slumped against the wall. She gazes at us with one wide, staring eye,
while below, like a second eye, are the slashing lines of her genitals.
Exhibition Tour
Picasso érotique opened on February 29, 2001, at the Galerie
nationale du Jeu de Paume, Paris, where it was shown until May 20,
2001. Following its Montreal showing - the only one in North America
- the exhibition was presented at the Museu Picasso, Barcelona, from
October 25, 2001, to January 25, 2002.
Exhibition
Catalogue
Picasso érotique is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue
with original essays by an international team of leading Picasso scholars,
including Jean-Jacques Lebel; Marilyn McCully, independent curator;
Maria Teresa Ocaña, director of the Museu Picasso; Robert Rosenblum,
curator of twentieth-century art at the Solomon Guggenheim Museum
of Art, New York; Jean Clair; Brigitte Baer, author of the catalogue
raisonné of Picasso's prints; and writers Pascal Quignard and
Annie Le Brun, among others. It is available for purchase online here
Organization and Sponsorship
Picasso érotique is organized by the Montreal Museum of Fine
Arts, the Musée national Picasso and the Réunion des
musées nationaux in co-production with the Galerie nationale
du Jeu de Paume, Paris, and the Museu Picasso, Barcelona. The curators
of the exhibition are Gérard Régnier, director, Musée
national Picasso, Paris; Guy Cogeval, Director, The Montreal Museum
of Fine Arts; and Maria Teresa Ocaña, director, Museu Picasso,
Barcelona. French author and artist Jean-Jacques Lebel, guest curator
of the Montreal exhibition, worked in collaboration with Dominique
Dupuis-Labbé of the Musée national Picasso, Paris, and
Nathalie Bondil-Poupard, Chief Curator at the Montreal Museum of Fine
Arts (both deputy curators for this exhibition).
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