Pablo Picasso Original Prints, Picasso Lithographs, Picasso Etchings, Picasso Linocuts, Picasso Illustrated Books, Picasso Ceramics, Picasso Posters, Picasso Cubism, Picasso Modernism, Picasso Neoexpressionism, Picasso Neoclassical - Denis Bloch Fine Art Gallery at The BEVERLY HILTON
Facebook Follow us on Twitter Read our Blog Denis Bloch Fine Art
HOME ARTISTS VINTAGE POSTERS PICASSO CERAMICS EVENTS ABOUT CONTACT ART TERMS
Pablo Picasso
Henri Matisse
Marc Chagall
Georges Braque
Joan Miro
Fernand Leger
Pierre Auguste Renoir
Andy Warhol
Roy Lichtenstein
Francis Bacon
David Hockney
Jean Michel Basquiat
Keith Haring
Damien Hirst
Robert Indiana
Jim Dine
Robert Rauschenberg
Tom Wesselmann
Edward Ruscha
Le Corbusier
Christo
Sam Francis
Rene Magritte
Alexander Calder
Wassily Kandinsky
Bernard Buffet
Tsuguharu Foujita
Pierre Alechinsky
Jean Cocteau
Georges Rouault
Tamara de Lempicka
Man Ray
Helen Frankenthaler
Ellsworth Kelly
Jean Dubuffet
Sonia Delaunay
Richard Estes
Roberto Matta
Rufino Tamayo
Wifredo Lam
Francisco Toledo
Alex Katz
Wayne Thiebaud
Mel Ramos
Zao Wou-Ki
Henry Moore
Niki de Saint-Phalle
Victor Vasarely
Raoul Ubac
Antoni Tapies
Paul Signac
Marie Laurencin
Nicola De Maria
Theo Tobiasse
Pablo Picasso, Spanish (1881-1973)
 
Colombe Volant (in rainbow)Six Contes Fantasques- LAiguille des SecondesArt et Solidarite
Colombe Volant (in rainbow)Six Contes Fantasques- L'Aiguille des SecondesArt et Solidarite
 
Le Vieux Roi (B1152)Tete de Femme IV  Portrait de Dora MaarLe Repas Frugal
Le Vieux Roi (B1152)Tete de Femme IV Portrait de Dora MaarLe Repas Frugal
 
Colombe VolantDompteur et son ChevalSuite Vollard- Sculpteur et Trois Danseuses Sculptees
Colombe VolantDompteur et son ChevalSuite Vollard- Sculpteur et Trois Danseuses Sculptees
 
LAtelier de CannesLa Danse des FaunesHomme et Femme (Verve)
L'Atelier de CannesLa Danse des FaunesHomme et Femme (Verve)
 
La Repetition II (Verve)Le Visage de la PaixLe Picador II
La Repetition II (Verve)Le Visage de la PaixLe Picador II
 
MaterniteSix Contes Fantasques- Le Bois dEnferRonde de la jeunesse
MaterniteSix Contes Fantasques- Le Bois d'EnferRonde de la jeunesse
 
Les DejeunersSuite 156- Repos. Deux Filles BavardantLe Vieux Roi (B869)
Les DejeunersSuite 156- Repos. Deux Filles BavardantLe Vieux Roi (B869)
 
Le Peintre et son ModeleLes PauvresPeintre et Modele
Le Peintre et son ModeleLes PauvresPeintre et Modele
 
Chouette MateCorridaOiseau sur la branche
Chouette MateCorridaOiseau sur la branche
 
Petit SoleilProfil de taureauQuatre Profils Enlacés
Petit SoleilProfil de taureauQuatre Profils Enlacés
 
Sujet PoissonTaureau
Sujet PoissonTaureau
 
“When you begin a picture, you often make some pretty discoveries. You must be on guard against these. Destroy it, do it over several times. With each destruction of a beautiful discovery, the artist does not really suppress it, but rather transforms it, condenses it, makes its more substantial. What comes out in the end is the result of discarded finds. Otherwise you become your own connoisseur. After all, I don’t buy my own pictures.” – Pablo Picasso

Pablo Picasso was born on October 25, 1881 the first son of Dona Maria y Picasso Lopez and Don José Ruiz Blasco. The Picasso Family legend reports that the infant Pablo Picasso was given up for dead at birth by the midwife, and was revived by his Uncle Don Salvador who blew cigar smoke into the infant Picasso’s face.

Picasso’s father was an artist and encouraged and instructed the young Pablo Picasso to draw and paint. Don Jose handed over his brushes and paints, vowing never to paint again, after watching thirteen-year-old Picasso masterfully complete the feet of some pigeons in 1894.

Pablo Picasso attended the Barcelona School of Fine Arts from 1896-97 and the Royal Academy in Madrid for a few months in 1897. In 1900, Pablo Picasso visited Paris for the first time. Enthralled by Paris, Picasso spent the next four years alternating between Barcelona and the City of Light.

In 1904 Pablo Picasso moved to Paris, where Picasso became a member of a circle of avant-garde artists and writers while living in “Le Bateau Lavoir”. This period coincides with the Picasso's infamous “Blue Period”. During Picasso’s “Blue Period,” Picasso took his subjects from the poor and social outcasts, with a sentimentalized melancholy mood expressed through cold ethereal blue tones. Pablo Picasso did a number of powerful etchings in a similar vein, including 'Le Repas Frugal' (The Frugal Meal) in 1904. Picasso’s Rose Period would follow where the Picasso’s palette softened with pinks, light reds and pale grays featuring circus players (saltimbanques), street performers, dancers and the harlequin.

Influenced by African sculpture and the simplified forms of painter Paul Cezanne, Pablo Picasso began experimenting with artist Georges Braque, in using a multiplicity of viewpoints so that many different aspects of an object were present simultaneously in the same image. The result was the birth of Cubism. Picasso’s first full-fledged Cubist painting Les Demoiselles d'Avignon was created in 1907. The work, was initially shunned by Picasso’s colleagues and remained in Picasso’s studio until the Museum of Modern Art, New York purchased it in 1937 for $24,000.

Pablo Picasso was married only twice, to Olga and then Jacqueline, and had four children by three women. Women played significant roles in Picasso’s personal and creative life. Picasso’s most influential companions were: Fernande Olivier (together 1904-1911), Eva Gouel (together 1911-1915), Olga Khokhlova (together 1917-1927; son Paulo born 1921), Marie Therese Walter (together 1927-1936; daughter Maya born 1935), Dora Maar (together 1936-1944), Francoise Gilot (together 1943-1953; son Claude born 1947; daughter Paloma born 1949) and Jacqueline Roche (together 1953-1973).

When Pablo Picasso spied seventeen-year-old Marie-Therese outside Galerie Lafayette, Picasso approached her and boldly said "Mademoiselle, you've got an interesting face. I'd like to paint your portrait. I am Pablo Picasso." Marie-Therese’s classical features, youth and purity inspired Picasso, and Marie-Therese was the central figure and muse of Picasso’s acclaimed 1930-1937 series of 100 etchings for The Vollard Suite, named after prominent art dealer Ambroise Vollard. Somewhat autobiographical, the Vollard Suite encompasses numerous etchings that depict Picasso’s affair with Marie-Therese in Picasso’s art studio.

In November 1945 Pablo Picasso set up shop at the Atelier Mourlot Freres, a well-known lithography studio in Paris. The Picasso-Mourlot creative partnership would result in ground-breaking lithographic techniques, never before utilized, and in the Mourlot studio Pablo Picasso produced some of the finest graphic prints ever created, including: lithographs, etchings, engravings, linocuts, and woodcuts.

Pablo Picasso died on April 8, 1973 in the South of France at the age of 91. During the last five years of Pablo Picasso’s life, Picasso was extremely productive, creating the famed 347 Suite—a group of 347 etchings Pablo Picasso created from March to October of 1968. This monumental printmaking feat was followed by a series of 156 etchings, aptly named the 156 Suite, which were published posthumously. These final etching by Pablo Picasso were a last window into one of history’s greatest artistic innovators and talents.

Select Museum Collections:
Musee Picasso, Paris
Museu Picasso, Barcelona
Hermitage Museum, Saint Petersburg
Tate Gallery, London
Museum Berggruen, Berlin
Guggenheim Museum, New York
Museum of Modern Art, New York
Metropolitan Museum, New York
LACMA, Los Angeles
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago
National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.

back to top