A Major Summer Exhibition At Wadsworth Atheneum-"The Artist's Studio" Explores The Evolving Styles Of Pablo Picasso
A Major Summer Exhibition At Wadsworth Atheneumâ
âThe Artistâs Studioâ Explores The Evolving Styles Of Pablo Picasso
HARTFORD â Pablo Picassoâs astonishing capacity for experimentation and self-renewal are celebrated in âPicasso: The Artistâs Studio,â a traveling exhibition organized by the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art with The Cleveland Museum of Art. The show has opened at the Wadsworth Atheneum, where it remains on view until September 23, and then travels to Cleveland where it will be on view October 21, 2001 to January 6, 2002.
Kate M. Sellers, the newly appointed director of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, commented on the exhibition, saying ââPicasso: The Artistâs Studioâ is the fourth in an ongoing series of major shows organized by the Wadsworth Atheneum that celebrate our rich history and collections.
âThere are two signature pictures dealing with this theme in the museumâs permanent collection. And âChickâ Austin, the Atheneumâs pioneering director, organized Americaâs first comprehensive Picasso exhibition here in 1934,â Ms Sellers continued.
Unlike many modern artists who treated their studios as inviolable sanctuaries, Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) used his studio not only as a place of work, but as a social and intellectual center where he negotiated with dealers, enthralled collectors, argued with critics, discussed literature, and seduced lovers. The studio is a recurring theme throughout Picassoâs evolving art and constructions of self-identity.
Nearly two-thirds of the approximately 35 paintings and all of the ten drawings featured in âPicasso: The Artistâs Studioâ are loans from foreign collections. Photographs documenting Picasso at work will also be displayed.
Encompassing an exhilarating range of styles â Realist, Cubist, Symbolist, Surrealist, Abstract and Classical â the pictures span Picassoâs lengthy career. Early works include the oil study âAcademic nudeâ (1895-97) and the charcoal and pencil âStudy of Left Armâ (1904); the Blue Period masterpiece âLa Vieâ (1903), which was Picassoâs first important painting on the artistâs studio theme; âSelf-Portrait with Paletteâ (1906); and the Cubist painting âThe Architectâs Tableâ (1912), which refers to Gertrude Steinâs patronage.
According to guest curator Michael C. FitzGerald, an associate professor of fine arts at Trinity College and the author of Making Modernism: Picasso and the Creation of the Market for Twentieth Century Art (Farrar Straus & Giroux, 1995), Picassoâs most intense exploration of the significance of the studio occurred during 1925-1935 and in the last 18 years of his life, 1955-1973.
âDuring the first phase, Picasso was inspired by the Surrealistsâ fascination with the unconscious to weave a complex series of images that delve into the creative process,â said Mr FitzGerald. âDrawing on sources of inspiration as diverse as African tribal objects and Classical sculpture, he presented the artist in many guises â tribal shaman, Greek god, or vengeful Minotaur, among others â to convey the range and variety of artistic inspiration.â
Works from this period in the exhibition include âBust and Paletteâ (1925), âPainter with Palette at Easelâ (1928), âThe Sculptorâ (1931), and âStill Life: Bust, Bowl, and Paletteâ (1932).
âIn his last, most extended, phase of devotion to the subject of the artistâs studio, Picasso created dozens of paintings that move from realistic renderings of the rooms in which he worked to evocations of great artists of the past, and final confrontations with lifeâs passing,â Mr FitzGerald continued.
âIn his last years, he courageously grappled with his physical deterioration by portraying the artist as a failing old man, before closing his career in a final burst of optimism by transforming the artist into a vigorous child,â Mr FitzGerald concluded.
Examples include two works from the mid-1950s depicting the muse-like figures of his second wife, Jacqueline Rocque, in âLas Meninasâ (1957); one of many homages to Velazquez, âPainter and Infantâ (1969); and the late self-portrait âAt Workâ (1971).
Lenders to âPicasso: The Artistâs Studioâ include the Picasso heirs and private collectors; Picasso Museu, Barcelona, Musée Picasso, Paris; Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid; Tate Gallery, London; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Philadelphia Museum of Art; Museum of Modern Art, New York; and private collections in Europe and the United States. Cynthia Roman, an associate curator of European art at Wadsworth Atheneum, is the coordinating curator for the Hartford exhibition.
Accompanying the exhibition is a 208-page catalogue with 100 color and 75 black and white illustrations written by Michael FitzGerald with an essay on Picassoâs âLa Vieâ by William Robinson, associate curator of painting at The Cleveland Museum of Art. Picasso: The Artistâs Studio, published by the Wadsworth Atheneum in association with Yale University Press, London, is available for $50 hardcover or $29.95 soft cover edition, at The Museum Shop at the Wadsworth Atheneum.
Admission for âPicasso: The Artistâs Studioâ at the Wadsworth Atheneum is by timed ticket. Tickets are $15 for adults; $13 for seniors and students with ID; $11 for youths age 6 to 17; $8 for museum members; and free for children under age 6. The ticket price includes general museum admission and handling fees.
To buy tickets, call VISTA Ticketing toll-free at 877-600-MAIN or visit Museum Ticketing Network at www.museumtix.com. Museum members should call 877-WADS-MEM. (Do not call the Wadsworth Atheneum.)
Thursday Evening
Artistsâ Talks
In conjunction with the Picasso exhibition, Connecticut artists working in a variety of media will give informal talks on their favorite works in the permanent collections of the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art during July and August. The gallery talks will take place on Thursday evenings at 6:30. Admission is free.
Painter Kathryn Myers will continue the series (which began on July 5) on July 19. Subsequent guests include Scott Richter, painter, on July 26; Yolanda Vasquez Petrocelli, photographer and mixed media artist, on August 2; Patricia Rosoff, painter, on August 16; Ionis Martin, painter, on August 23; and Chet Kempczynski, painter and printmaker, on August 30.
The Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art is at 600 Main Street in Hartford. For general museum information, call 860-278-2670. Museum hours are Tuesday and Wednesday, 11 am to 5 pm. Thursday 11 am to 8 pm; and Friday through Sunday, 11 am to 5 pm.