PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
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PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)

Cheval et taureau

细节
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
Cheval et taureau
dated and inscribed Boisgeloup 16 juillet XXXIV (along the left edge); dated and inscribed again Boisgeloup 16 juillet XXXIV (on the reverse)
pen and ink on paper
12 x 25,7 cm. (4 ¾ x 10 1⁄8 in.)
Executed in Boisgeloup on 16 July 1934
来源
The artist's estate.
Marina Picasso (b. 1950), Paris; by descent from the above.
Galerie Jan Krugier & Cie., Geneva (no. JK 2861); on consignment from the above.
Acquired from the above in 1981; then by descent to the present owners.
出版
C. Zervos, Pablo Picasso, vol. 8, Œuvres de 1932 à 1937, Paris, 1957, no. 211, pl. 98 (ill.; with incorrect medium).
S. Goeppert & H.C. Goeppert-Frank, La Minotauromachie de Pablo Picasso, Geneva, 1987, p. 25 (ill.; with incorrect medium).
H.B. Chipp, Picasso's Guernica: History, Transformations, Meanings, London, 1989, no. 5.14, p. 52 (detail ill.).
L. Ullmann, Picasso und der Krieg, Bonn, 1993, no. 62, p. 48 (ill.; titled 'Stier und Pferd').
展览
Munich, Haus der Kunst, Pablo Picasso: Eine Ausstellung zum hundertsten Geburtstag - Werke aus der Sammlung Marina Picasso, February - April 1981, no. 174, p. 337 & 339 (ill.; titled 'Stier und Pferd'); then Cologne, Josef-Haubrich-Kunsthalle, August - October 1981; and Frankfurt am Main, Städtische Galerie, October 1981 - January 1982.
Venice, Centro di Cultura di Palazzo Grassi, Picasso - Opere dal 1895 al 1971 dalla Collezione Marina Picasso, May - July 1981, no. 220, p. 328-329 (ill.; titled 'Toro e cavallo' and with incorrect medium).
Tokyo, The National Museum of Modern Art, Picasso: Masterpieces from Marina Picasso Collection and from Museums in U.S.A. and U.S.S.R., April - May 1983, no. 138, pp. 279 (ill.) & 336 (titled 'Bull goring a Horse' and with incorrect medium); then Kyoto, Municipal Museum, June - July 1983.
Bielefeld, Kunsthalle, Picasso - Todesthemen, January - April 1984, no. 50, pp. 212 (ill.) & 294-295 (titled 'Stier und Pferd').
Melbourne, National Gallery of Victoria, Picasso: Works from the Marina Picasso Collection in Collaboration with Galerie Jan Krugier, Geneva, with Loans from Museums in Europe and the United States of America and Private Collections, July - September 1984, no. 107, p. 116 (ill.; titled 'Taureau et cheval'); then Sydney, Art Gallery of New South Wales, October - December 1984.
Bielefeld, Kunsthalle, Picassos Surrealismus: Werke 1925-1937, September - December 1991, no. 79a, p. 340 (ill.).
Paris, Musée Picasso, Picasso: Toros y Toreros, April - June 1993, no. 68, p. 174 (ill.) & 253 (titled 'Taureau et cheval' and with incorrect medium); then Bayonne, Musée Bonnat, July - September 1993; and Barcelona, Museu Picasso, October 1993 - January 1994.
London, Croydon Museum, Cock and Bull stories: A Picasso Bestiary, March - May 1995, p. 43 (ill.; titled 'Bull and Horse' and with incorrect medium).
Kyoto, The National Museum of Modern Art, Picasso: The Love and the Anguish - The Road to Guernica, October - December 1995, no. 26, pp. 99-100 (ill.; titled 'Bull goring a Horse' and with incorrect medium); then Tokyo, Tobu Museum of Art, December 1995 - March 1996.
Hamburg, Hamburger Kunsthalle, Pablo Picasso - Der blinde Minotaurus - Die Sammlung Hegewisch in der Hamburger Kunsthalle, February 1997, pp. 36-37 (ill.) & 80-81 (titled 'Stier und Pferd'; ill. again on the back cover).
Madrid, Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Picasso: Corrida de toros, 1934, January - May 1999, no. 6, p. 48 (ill.; titled 'Toro y caballo' and with incorrect medium).
Martigny, Fondation Pierre Gianadda, Picasso: Sous le soleil de Mithra, June - November 2001, no. P 57, p. 95 (ill.; titled 'Tête de taureau', with incorrect medium and dimensions); then Paris, Musée Picasso, November 2001 - March 2002.
Oslo, Munchmuseet, Pablo Picasso - Den blinde Minotaurus - grafikk og tegning, November 2002 - February 2003 (no cat.).
Münster, Graphikmuseum Pablo Picasso, Pablo Picasso and Marie-Thérèse Walter: Between Classicism and Surrealism, May - August 2004, pp. 207 (ill.) & 221 (titled 'Bull and Horse' and with incorrect medium).
Malaga, Museo Picasso, Picasso. Toros, April - July 2005, no. 47, pp. 164 (ill.) & 202 (titled 'Toro y caballo'; with incorrect medium).
Hamburg, Ernst Barlach Haus - Stiftung Hermann F. Reemtsma, Pablo Picasso - Der Stier und das Mädchen - Meisterblätter aus der Sammlung Hegewisch, June - October 2010, no. 18, p. 112 (ill.; titled 'Stier und Pferd').

荣誉呈献

Zack Boutwood
Zack Boutwood Cataloguer

拍品专文

Cheval et taureau shows the agonised yet intimate moment when a bull, head lowered for maximum upward force, thrusts one of its horns deep into the body of a horse whose death-throes are rendered as an ecstasy of pain. The bull’s expression is one of savage ferocity as it obeys an atavistic instinct to gore its victim; its flared nostrils and angry brow speak of dominance, bloodlust and blind animality. Meanwhile the horse, with its head reared back, eyes widened, shrieks a final cry of terror.

Picasso’s affinity and identification with the power, virility and intensity of the bull is a motif which frequently recurs throughout his oeuvre - a multi-layered symbol expressive of the primordial life-force that charged his artistic vitality. In the context of his Spanish cultural heritage and more specifically the corrida, the bull embodied notions of aggression and raw brutality while the horse represented nobility and sacrifice. The bullfight was a spectacle in which the tragic struggle between the forces of life and death, the essence of the human condition, was repeatedly reenacted.

More widely, the artist was fully aware of the rise of fascism in Italy and Germany at the time and was exploring ways in which the suffering and torment that contemporary political turmoil entailed could be portrayed. Cheval et taureau anticipates some of the aspects of his most famous anti-war painting Guernica, made two years later during the Spanish civil war, in which horse and bull stand for helpless suffering and untamed barbarity.

The mark-making here is as purposeful and direct as the subject matter is elemental, its confidence typical of Picasso’s bravura certitude. The composition is taut - its framing barely able to contain the power and dynamism of its figures. The bull has one front hoof raised as it uses the full force of its musculature to deliver the fatal injury to its quarry while the horse similarly raises its own leg, but this time in a paroxysm of pain, a travesty of its normal elegance as its belly and rear legs are brought to ground.

Picasso also delineates a mirroring between the beasts as if to underline the symbiosis of their relationship in this final act. The viewer cannot help but notice the sinuously feminine lines of the horse’s mane as it flies in twisted movement, marks which are echoed in the bull’s lustily swooshing tail. The intensity of the ink hatches around the bull’s head and shoulders also shadow the body of the horse and the upper background as if to emphasise this area of the drawing as the locus for pain and the corresponding sensation of it.

Picasso wrestled with the complexity of desire in its many forms throughout his career. His art often explored the troublingly conflicted urges of arousal and aversion and Cheval et taureau exemplifies his honest recognition, through visual metaphors of subjugation, that a primal longing for life could be inextricably linked to a capacity for ruthless cruelty.

更多来自 扣人心弦:赫格维希珍藏第二部分

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