NEW YORK, NY.- Pace announced its presentation of Picasso: 14 Sketchbooks at its 540 West 25th Street gallery in New York, marking the 50th anniversary of the artists death.
On view from November 10 to December 22, this exhibition is organized in collaboration with the Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso, Madrid (FABA). Picasso: 14 Sketchbooks offers a unique and intimate view of the ways in which Picasso worked, tracing the evolution of his observations and ideas into plans for his compositions across painting and sculpture.
Pace has been extremely fortunate to have worked with the Picasso family mounting extraordinary exhibitions over the last 40 years. This collaboration with FABA marks Pace's thirtieth show featuring Picasso's work and its eighth major solo presentation dedicated to the artist. As part of the gallerys presentation, Pace Publishing produced a new book focused on the sketchbooks in the exhibition, which is available to purchase on- site and online.
The sketchbooks featured in the show at Pace in New Yorkwhich are being displayed chronologicallydate between 1900 and 1959, spanning almost every period of Picassos career. These artworks have been contextualized by a rich body of research about the events of Picassos life, assembled by curatorial advisors and Picasso experts Marilyn McCully and Michael Raeburn. Additionally, monitors installed atop the tables in the gallery space show images of all the pages from the sketchbooks in the exhibition, with each monitor running on its own loop to allow visitors to experience every sketchbook from cover to cover. A film about the making of the artists War and Peace murals in the French city of Vallauris is also being presented in the exhibition alongside his drawings for the project.
Offering a window into Picassos imagination and creative process, each of the sketchbooks in the show is connected to well-known bodies of work by the artist, from his youthful experimentations in Spain and France around 1900 through the revolutionary developments of his time in Paris and his final years in the South of France. These sketchbooksexhibited alongside related ceramics, paintings, photographs, and archival materialsshed light on Picassos approach for many of his major works, including his iconic painting Les Demoiselles dAvignon (1907), part of the collection of the Museum of Modern Art in New York; Dora Maar in an Armchair (1939), part of the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York; and his large-scale War and Peace murals, completed in 1952. Sketchbooks in the exhibition also feature pages of poetry by the artist, who often wrote in a lyrical, stream of consciousness style in both Spanish and French.
Picasso: 14 Sketchbooks opens nearly 40 years after Paces presentation of Je Suis le Cahier: The Sketchbooks of Picasso, a landmark exhibition organized by Arne and Marc Glimcher at the gallerys East 57th Street space in 1986. Je Suis le Cahier, the first exhibition to introduce Picassos sketchbooks to the world, traveled to numerous art institutions internationally following its run at Pace, including the Royal Academy of Arts in London, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris, the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, and the Kunsthaus Zurich. Pace and Atlantic Monthly Press published a catalogueedited by Arne and Marc Glimcherdevoted to the exhibition, and this book remains a key resource on the artist.
Pablo Picasso was perhaps the most influential artist of the 20th century. Though Spanish, Picasso worked mainly in France, and his first mature phase in Paris was his Blue Period, followed by the Rose period. With Les Demoiselles dAvignon, he pioneered the style of Cubism without which modern and contemporary art would be radically different. Another of his most enduring images, the iconic Guernica, immortalizes the brutality of the Spanish Civil War. With Analytic Cubism, Synthetic Cubism, Surrealism, and the incorporation of primitive imagery, Picasso and his contemporaries Georges Braque and Marcel Duchamp challenged the trajectory of the arts and rebuilt the context in which future generations of artists practiced.