What's Hot?
Tourism Ministry, FTAN, NTDA Partner Travel Marketing For...
My Ex-Record Label Boss Forged My Signature, Stole...
Otu Unveils Ambitious Plans to Expand Carnival Calabar’s...
Award-Winning Communications Leader, Ayodele Alabi, Set To Unveil...
Indian Film Union Drops Boycott Call Against Bollywood...
Young People Invited To Submit Art For Exhibition
Tems Faces Backlash Over New Music Announcement Amid...
Children’s Reading Festival Returns To City
Celine Dion ‘Heartbroken’ By Death Of Beauty And...
The Little-Known Moroccan City That Could Be The...
  • Home
  • Arts & Exhibitions
  • Culture & Festivals
    • Culture Africana
    • Culture People
  • Fashion & Lifestyle
    • Music, Movies & More
  • News
    • Travel News
  • Opinion
    • Reviews (The Critics)
  • TCN Literati
  • Tourism & Hospitality
The Culture Newspaper
Arts & Exhibitions

British Museum Shows Off Its Peerless Collection of Picasso Prints

by The Culture Newspaper October 7, 2024
by The Culture Newspaper October 7, 2024

Pablo Picasso’s first permanent address in Paris was a Montmartre squat. Nicknamed the Washhouse Boat because the tenement building swayed and groaned in foul weather, it was inhabited by a rabble of poor artists, and its surroundings cast Picasso among society’s downtrodden. This was the time of Picasso’s “Blue Period,” defined by its forlorn monochromatic paintings, but there’s an etching that captures the spirit equally well.

A Frugal Meal (1904) makes a mockery of the Impressionist’s bountiful café, its couple is gaunt and melancholy, their demeanor of resignation offered with such empathy that one infers the artist drew on personal experience. Made with a salvaged zinc plate, it was Picasso’s first proper attempt at printmaking, a medium that would shadow and sometimes inform his broader practice for the next seven decades.

two gaunt sketched peole sit at a table

Pablo Picasso, The frugal meal (1904). © Succession Picasso, DACS, London 2024.

Picasso would go onto produce nearly 2,500 prints across the course of his career. This may come as a surprise to those more familiar with his paintings and sculptures, though perhaps it shouldn’t, given the artist’s omnivorous and prolific habits. An expansive exhibition at the British Museum is arriving to fill in any such blanks in the public’s imagination. Simply named “Picasso: Printmaker,” it gathers around 100 etchings, lithographs, aquatints, and linocuts that evidence how Picasso explored the medium of print despite limited formal training.

an abstract image of bulls leaping over yellow sun figures

Pablo Picasso, Leaping bulls (1950). © Succession Picasso, DACS, London 2024.

The show is the culmination of two decades of targeted and attritional collecting and offers the British Museum as an institution keen to go beyond its reputation for staging narrative exhibitions around historic artifacts. When the museum acquired 19 largely abstract prints in 2016, it declared that it had filled “the last important gap” in Picasso’s oeuvre of prints. In the run up to the exhibition, the museum’s director, Nicholas Cullinan, lays claim to showing Picasso’s “UK’s most extensive collection of prints”. With well over 500 prints, this hardly seems like hyperbole.

A faun, depicted with horns and a tail, lifts a sheet to uncover a reclining woman in a dimly lit room

Pablo Picasso, Faun uncovering a woman(1936). © Succession Picasso, DACS, London 2024.

Picasso’s explorations of print were intense sporadic affairs, and his two most celebrated episodes are on full display here, full of lust and curves and trickery. The first belongs to his Vollard Suite, named for the art dealer who commissioned 100 Neoclassical etchings from the Spaniard in 1930 (though it took him seven years to complete). Though not drawn from a single source, they allude not only to classical mythology, but art history’s earlier masters of print. Faun Uncovering a Woman (1936), for instance, plays with Rembrandt’s depiction of Jupiter and Antiope loosening lines and veering into abstraction.

READ More  Jet Li Shares Heartwarming Memories Of DMX Years After His Death

An abstract scene featuring three figures, one seated and two standing, engaged in observing a small, chaotic display of animals in the center.

Pablo Picasso, Picasso, his work and his audience (1968) © Succession Picasso, DACS, London 2024.

The second of Picasso’s vaunted forays into printmaking is his “347 Suite,” named for the number prints he executed in a seven-month blitz in 1968. The British Museum boasts the full set, but given the works riff and repeat—he would sometimes make up to eight prints per day—only 28 are on display. They are erotic and fantastical works filled with beasts, breasts, and bands of blackness. In its best-known work, Picasso, His Work and His Audience (1968), the octogenarian quite bluntly confronts himself and his viewer.

Abstract depiction of a figure and a bull-like animal in bold, curving shapes and deep earth tones, featuring sharp contrasts of black and ochre.

Pablo Picasso, Pike II 1959 © Succession Picasso, DACS, London 2024.

“[Picasso’s prints] demonstrated a deep understanding of the medium and eagerness to experiment and innovate,” said Catherine Daunt, the curator of modern and contemporary prints. “Printmaking became, for Picasso, the art form through which he could tell stories and follow a thought or idea, few artists contributed more to the medium in the 20th century.”

“Picasso: Printmaker” runs from November 7 to March 30, 2025.

britishcollectionfitsmuseumofoffpeerlesspicassoprintsshows
0
FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinWhatsappEmail
The Culture Newspaper

previous post
The Museum of Modern Art announces ‘Out of the Shadows: Rediscovering Mohammad Reza Aslani’
next post
Riyadh, AlUla, Jeddah, Makkah and Dammam Fuel Saudi Tourism Boom with Expanding Airline Routes and Soaring Hotel Occupancy

You may also like

Young People Invited To Submit Art For Exhibition

June 4, 2026

French Museum Files Criminal Complaint Over Theft Of...

June 2, 2026

Culture, Fashion Shine As 2026 Ojude Oba Festival...

May 29, 2026

Lagos Theatre Creatives Revive African Storytelling Through Immersive...

May 29, 2026

Brazil Lost 80 Percent of Its National Museum...

May 28, 2026

Egypt Sees Tourism Boom As Thousands Flock To...

May 28, 2026

Artnovation Brings Africa–Europe Creative Dialogue to Milan

May 24, 2026

‘Ancient’ Statues Fraud Foiled By Fake Paperwork

May 24, 2026

London Museum Unveils Jurassic Ocean Giants

May 22, 2026

TheatreMania Africa partners Corona School on theatre initiative

May 22, 2026

Leave a Comment Cancel Reply

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

Recent Posts

  • Tourism Ministry, FTAN, NTDA Partner Travel Marketing For National Tourism Safety Conference
  • My Ex-Record Label Boss Forged My Signature, Stole My Money – Qing Madi Alleges
  • Otu Unveils Ambitious Plans to Expand Carnival Calabar’s Economic, Cultural Footprint
  • Award-Winning Communications Leader, Ayodele Alabi, Set To Unveil Three New Books
  • Indian Film Union Drops Boycott Call Against Bollywood Star Ranveer Singh

Sponsored

Recent Posts

  • Tourism Ministry, FTAN, NTDA Partner Travel Marketing For National Tourism Safety Conference

    June 4, 2026
  • My Ex-Record Label Boss Forged My Signature, Stole My Money – Qing Madi Alleges

    June 4, 2026
  • Otu Unveils Ambitious Plans to Expand Carnival Calabar’s Economic, Cultural Footprint

    June 4, 2026

Categories

  • Arts & Exhibitions
  • Culture & Festivals
  • Culture Africana
  • Culture People
  • Fashion & Lifestyle
  • Food
  • Music, Movies & More
  • News
  • Opinion
  • Photo News
  • Reviews (The Critics)
  • TCN Interview
  • TCN Literati
  • Tourism & Hospitality
  • Travel News
  • Travel Trends
  • Travelogue
  • What's Hot?
  • World Culture

Connect with us

Connect with us
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Youtube
  • About Us
  • Advertise With Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact Us

@2025 - The Culture Newspaper. All Right Reserved. Maintained by Freelart

The Culture Newspaper
  • Home
  • Arts & Exhibitions
  • Culture & Festivals
    • Culture Africana
    • Culture People
  • Fashion & Lifestyle
    • Music, Movies & More
  • News
    • Travel News
  • Opinion
    • Reviews (The Critics)
  • TCN Literati
  • Tourism & Hospitality