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Le Peintre à la Palette (Painter with Palette),

1963

Pablo Picasso, 1881–1973; born Malaga, Spain; died Mougins, France; active Paris
Printed by Hidalgo Arnéra, French, active mid-20th century
x1977-58
The artist and his model in the studio was a major theme in Picasso’s paintings and prints; additionally, he created multiple series of works copied after historic paintings by artists such as Eugenè Delacroix and Édouard Manet, reinterpreted in his own audacious style. Picasso’s improvised variations on masterpieces culminated in a series of fifty-eight canvases analyzing Diego Velázquez’s Las Meninas (1656), a towering monument in Western art that depicts the Spanish master himself painting the daughter of King Philip IV and her entourage. This print combines the two themes: Picasso’s abstracted image of an artist at his easel is a clever variation on the figure of Velázquez holding his palette, including the curling hair, mustache, and goatee of the artist, as well as his outward gaze toward the viewer, for which the painting is famous.

Information

Title
Le Peintre à la Palette (Painter with Palette)
Dates

1963

Maker
Medium
Linocut
Dimensions
block: 64 × 53 cm (25 3/16 × 20 7/8 in.) sheet: 75.2 × 62.1 cm (29 5/8 × 24 7/16 in.)
Credit Line
Gift of Mrs. Frederick B. Deknatel, in memory of her husband, Frederick B. Deknatel, Class of 1928, at the fiftieth reunion
Object Number
x1977-58
Place Made

Europe, France

Inscription
Numbered in graphite, lower left: 15//150 Signed in graphite, lower right: Picasso
Marks/Labels/Seals
Watermark: Arches
Reference Numbers
Baer 1342; Bloch 1153
Culture