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Home » Archives » June 2008 » Picasso comes to Abu Dhabi

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06/26/2008: "Picasso comes to Abu Dhabi" by Valerie Grove


At the Emirates Palace hotel in Abu Dhabi until September is the Arab world's first public exhibition of works by Pablo Picasso. Borrowed from the collection at the Musée National Picasso in Paris, the retrospective show features examples of all styles and periods and features 186 paintings, sculptures and works on paper,.

I have not really through about Picasso for years. The fact that I can still visualize most of the well known pieces from various periods has resulted in a smug assumption of familiarity that almost meant I didn't bother going to this show. This would have been criminal because this show was an absolute revelation. Seeing such a range of work mostly unfamiliar to me was like seeing a completely different artist and given my own accumulation of years the way in which I perceived the work was also completely different.




The show was hung in chronological order starting with a blue self-portrait from 1901. Most of this early work was figurative including several studies on paper for ‘Les Demoiselles d’Avignon’. There is perhaps a compositional shadow of Van Gogh in the earthy 'Landscape with Two Figures from 1908 and a sculptural influence is already evident especially in a small triptych of three very solid looking heads.

The next section loosely covered the 1920s. The paintings got larger and were mostly of figures in various poses and settings including two unfinished portraits in conventional style, which seemed to have been abandoned half way through. A sense of boredom with these kinds of conventions was reflected in other figures that seemed to become gradually chunkier and more imposing. The most interesting was ‘Seated Woman’ from 1920 which appeared to have started off with at least some classical intentions but by the end the hands and feet were grossly exaggerated and distorted and suddenly the suggestion of a radical change was there. This was also the case with 'Reading the Letter' from 1921. I then went back and looked at the hands and feet of all the other figures finally concluding that an additional motivation for immersion in the joys of human abstraction was because Picasso wasn't very good at painting hands and feet.

The next section covering the 1930s had a huge mix of seated and abstracted female figures, which gradually become more angular as the decade progressed. This use of colour and style in this section were definitely the most familiar like 'Reading' from 1932 although I was amazed at just how much there was. The output in this period seemed to have been more prodigious than at any other time and one big surprise for me was that he seemed to spend the entirety of 1931 doing bronze sculptures of large and distorted heads with hugely exaggerated noses. I had no idea so much of this work existed.

One of the exceptions to all studies of sitting, standing, reclining and general other women was 'Bullfight: Death of a Female Toreador' from 1933. The dramatic and sensual intertwining of bullfighter, horse and bull with a violent end assured for at least one of them was probably the most powerful picture in the show.

Perhaps understandably, there was not much work here from the 1940s. The rate seems to slow down dramatically, the colours turn darker, the motifs spikier and several skulls also make an appearance.

The next surprise was ‘Massacre in Korea’ from 1951, its dramatic impact, enhanced by a compositional layout seemingly borrowed from Manet’s "The execution of Maximillian". The ubiquitously reproduced image of Guernica has so defined Picasso in relation to war that it was fascinating to see an image referencing a different conflict.

There was not so much work from the 50s and 60s either but what was there suggested a revisitation and amalgamation of the past with some homages - one to Manet and possibly one to Matisse. There was also a one picture with abstracted though explicit female genitalia which I am surprised made it past the censors!
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One of the final pieces was 'The Young Painter' from 1972 and the childlike simplicity of this painting is a marked contrast to the rest of the show. It's directness makes a big emotional impact and it was hard not to wonder if this was Picasso revisiting a very early version of himself. Apparently it was painted only a few months before his death in 1973 so I guess it is a very appropriate image to end with.

Replies: 6 Comments

on Tuesday, July 22nd, STAMATIS BURPULIS said

Picasso belongs to art..Relationships were a release but also an inspiration to give back creative life forces. He hurt many people. Nothing stood in his way. Good? or Bad? To be truely a great artist must one stand alone and be as self absorbed as Picasso? Many people I know find it disturbing but how can one work if not working and loosing oneself in the act..no matter what the act. Are you an artist if you are not working. Primarily for Picasso, painting, printing, drawing, and sculpture absorbed him.....as did women. He created his own relaity not anyone elses. Any comments on what I have to saw?

He was very complicated but appeared to be secure and confident no matter what was going on in his head. He was from the same school as my Grandfather a restauranteur. Some smiles, some wit and seriously when to work having a good day or not so good..he worked, it seems, all the time.

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on Saturday, June 28th, amrts said

interesting observation. "...that a work of art must be destroyed before...."

on Friday, June 27th, AmazingGreetingCards said

As always, Piccaso makes a dramatic statement. I especially the love blue self portrait. Not wild about The Young Painter.

on Thursday, June 26th, walt said

The Picasso collection in Paris was a revelation when I first took students to see it in 1994. Then a few years ago I got a chance to the collection in Barcelona with one of my former art history professors, now a colleague during one of those student trips I used to plan. Again, scales fell from my eyes. If you want to get a sense how the old order was summed up and the new order begun you must go to Picasso. He was the transitional person who predated everything after the end of the 1800's. He should even be given credit for a certain kind of desconstruction by the postmodernists...his idea that a work is often scraped off and repainted several times before one could really grasp what was happening before one on the canvas...that a work of art must often be destroyed before it is finished is related to their idea that history, to be properly understood, must be deconstructed so as to get rid of preconceived concepts to see it with a fresh eye.

And yes, I agree, it seems important that such a specific modernist has been brought to a Muslim country, genitalia and all. But don't forget that there have always been some Moorish inspiration to his work. Perhaps he was a perfect choice.