PARIS.- Gagosian is presenting Picasso and Maya: Father and Daughter, the first exhibition dedicated to the artists diverse portrayals of his eldest daughter, Maya.
Maria de la Concepción, known as Maya, was born on September 5, 1935. During the first ten years of her life she was a constant subject in her fathers drawings and paintings, who observed with fascination and tenderness her physical and mental development. Her mother, Marie-Thérèse Walter, was the artists most iconic model. After meeting in 1927 at the Galeries Lafayette in Paris, Picasso and Marie-Thérèse began a long lasting love affair, resulting in Picassos first daughter Maya. Following Mayas birth, Picasso chronicled intimate details of their private life together en famille, exploring the archetypal theme of maternity. Mayas portraits reflect the great joy that she brought into the artist's life, even in the looming shadow of World War II. Out of all of Picassos children Maya was most frequently depicteda muse in the image of her mother.
This exhibition presents major works from the 1930s and the 1940s, including a collection of intimate portraits of Maya and Marie-Thérèse, sculptures and little paper cuts-out fashioned especially for his daughter. Like many of his favorite portraits of family members, most of the pieces remained in Picasso's personal collection until his death in 1973. Alongside the artists works, a selection of archival materialunpublished photographs, films, letters and poems explores the relationship between father and daughter, while providing an invaluable testimony of this new-found happiness.
This collection of works and archival documents retrace the childhood and youth of Maya, spanning her birth to her coming of age. In the first months after Maya was born, Picasso captured moments of intimacy between a young mother and her daughter (Marie-Thérèse allaitant Maya, 1935; Maya à dix mois avec Marie-Thérèse, 1936), secretly living in an apartment rented for them by Picasso at 45 rue La Boétie, only steps away from his own at number 23. Numerous drawing of Maya, lovingly composed, present realistic portraits in a classic style, similar to those of Marie-Thérèse realized by the artist during this time (Maya à lâge de trois mois, 1935). His paintings of Maya stray from this academic style, reflecting rather a complex artistic analysis by the artist culminating in a cubism that can only be qualified as psychological. In a vibrant series of portraits realized in 1938, Picasso reveals the energy and curiosity that animated his young daughter. We see Maya embracing a doll against her cheek (Maya à la poupée et au cheval, 1938) in a posture that recalls the Virgin and Child, or in the midst of playing with a boat (Maya au tablier rouge, 1938; La fille de l'artiste à deux ans et demi avec un bateau (Maya), 1938). At the beginning of the 1950s, Mayas doll-faced visage transformed into the delicate profile of a young woman in a series of pencil drawings (Maya, profil gauche, 1951).
The relationship between father and daughter is one formed by a unique bond, as can be seen through Mayas active role during Henri-Georges Clouzots filming of Le Mystère Picasso in 1955 at the Victorine Studios in Nice (photographs by Edward Quinn).
Mayas daughter, art historian Diana Widmaier Picasso, has curated the show. She is a Picasso sculpture expert and has organized several exhibitions including Picassos Picassos: A Selection from the Collection of Maya Ruiz-Picasso (Gagosian, New York, 2016), Picasso.mania (Grand Palais, Paris, 2015) and Picasso and Marie-Thérèse: Lamour fou (Gagosian, New York, 2011). In 2005, she wrote a book about Picassos erotic works called Picasso: Art Can Only Be Erotic (Munich, Prestel).