Description: Oval Head of Man Looking Straight (Plate XXIII)Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881-1973)Medium: Collotype on Arches paperEdition: 49/275 Year: 1964Dimensions: 10 1/4" x 13" Description: from Le Carmen des CarmenPublisher: Mourlot, Paris Catalogue Raisonné: Bloch 1003; Baer 872; see Cramer books 126Copy of justification page signed by Pablo Picasso in red Crayon included with artCarmen is, unquestionably, one of the most popular operas of all time. First premiering in 1875, the opera was based off a novella written by Prosper Merimée in 1845. Set in Andalusia, the novella, and subsequently the opera, was the result of Merimée’s six-month tour of Spain in 1830. The operatic version differed slightly than Merimee’s original novella; the encounter between the headstrong gypsy girl, Carmen, and the bullfighter she enthralls is delivered as a straight narrative, full of tragedy and lurid detail. By the twentieth century, the operatic version was the more popularly known version of Merimée’s story. Still, his novella remained a fixture of French literature and was translated into many different languages.Born in Andalusia, Pablo Picasso was intensely proud of his “deep-southern” Spanish roots. As an avid reader, it is more than likely that he would have read Carmen in Spanish in his youth, in French later in adulthood. Carmen is also one of the works of literature to posit the archetype of the “femme fatale”; known for his problematic relationships with women, Picasso most likely would have also found the story of the fiercely independent and manipulative woman captivating.Picasso began his work on the livre d’artiste in 1948; at the time, his relationship with Françoise Gilot was decidedly cozy and domestic. The cool, elegantly minimal images he realized that year, and in 1949, are certainly a result of the calmness in his relationship. Even the four aquatints produced in May of 1949 for the eleven deluxe copies--two heads of mantilla-bedecked señorita, one of a matador, and one of a bullfight in progress--exude a calmness that is in direct odds with the melodrama associated with both the Carmen story and Picasso’s relationships.The thirty-eight engravings with burin are of highly stylized faces, some of indistinguishable gender and most pared down to a very few black lines on white. The first engraving in the volume, preceding the first page of text, is of a woman’s visage crowned by an Andalusian mantilla – it is the only topical reference among the images to Carmen herself. A few are recognizable as bull’s heads, but just barely. Such elegance and simplicity was not unusual for Picasso, but he rarely attained such extremes before or since. It is possible that Picasso was paying homage, tinged with satirical overstatement, to his friend and rival Matisse, whose work had become exemplars of such simplistic austerity.Unlike his previous livres d’artiste – such as Pierre Reverdy’s Chant des Morts and Vingt Poems de Gongora, in which he rewrote the text by hand – Picasso typeset Merimée’s text, except for the first letter of each paragraph. Along with similarly effervescent notations inserted after each paragraph, these illuminations, outsized and florid like their medieval predecessors, bristle with marginal embellishments called remarques. These sunbursts, hints of landscape, a single wide-open eye, and seemingly non-objective doodles occupy the upper and lower margins left by the typesetting. The severity and geometry of these linear inventions are reminiscent of Picasso’s first experiments with surrealism and geometric abstraction in the late 1920s and early 1930s.Carmen was published in an edition of 275, including 30 which were on Japon nacré paper, by the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris, part of the library’s extensive activity as a publisher of bibliophilia. Following World War II, the Bibliothèque was instrumental in reviving French publishing activity, especially specialized formats associated with French arts and letters. No such format better represented the marriage of visual art and literature than the livre d’artiste. The coupling of Pablo Picasso with Prosper Merimée--the Spaniard at the center of French art, and the French writer at the center of Spanish culture – made perfect sense in this context, especially as Spain itself remained under the yoke of a fascist dictator. Whether Picasso had picked Carmen himself or was approached by a Bibliotheque official, the French-Spanish collaboration spoke of neighborly amity and implied ultimate triumph over political and social oppression. This work comes with full historical documentation, which includes the following: Certificate of Authenticity, Letter of Appraisal, Justification Pages from the artist, as well as additional information on the artist and the print atelier's collaboration.This piece is referenced as well in various catalogue raisonnés (a comprehensive, annotated listing of all the known works of an artist either in a particular medium or all media), which is provided on the Certificate of Authenticity and companion pages. Also included is the work's recorded provenance history. The Certificate of Authenticity accompanying this work guarantees its authenticity. COA and accompanying documents arrive under separate cover.
Price: 899 USD
Location: Laguna Beach, California
End Time: 2024-12-27T07:05:19.000Z
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 30 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Artist: Pablo Picasso
Unit of Sale: Single Piece
Edition Size: 275
Signed By: Signed Justification Page
Size: Small
Date of Creation: 1900-1949
Framing: Unframed
Region of Origin: france
Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
Year of Production: 1964
Unit Type: Unit
Item Height: 10 in
Style: Modernism, Portraiture, Postmodernism
Features: Limited Edition
Item Width: 13
Print Type: Collotype
Time Period Produced: 1960-1969
Image Orientation: Portrait
Signed: Unsigned
Period: Post-War (1940-1970)
Title: Oval Head of Man Looking Straight (Plate XXIII)
Material: Paper
Certificate of Authenticity (COA): Yes
Original/Licensed Reprint: Original
Subject: Cartoons & Caricatures
Type: Print
Edition Type: Limited Edition
COA Issued By: Artist
Original/Reproduction: Original Print
Theme: Art, People
Production Technique: collotype
Country/Region of Manufacture: France