Thursday, 26 March 2026

Pablo Picasso in Barcelona - ceramics




Ceramics by Picasso at the Picasso Museum, Barcelona.

Picasso came into direct contact with ceramics for the first time in 1946, in Vallauris on the French Riviera, following a visit to the Madoura ceramics workshop. The enormous interest and curiosity that this ancient art aroused in him made him want to learn its secrets and, above all, include it in his work as another artistic medium.

Ceramics opened up a new field of experimentation for Picasso since the malleability of raw clay makes it an optimal material for all kinds of transformations and metamorphoses and an ideal painting support. Once he had mastered the secrets of the decorative techniques and materials of pottery (oxides, enamel, slips), Picasso injected new life into the pitchers, plates and pots that came out of the Madoura workshop by applying zoomorphic iconographies such as fish and owls, and mythological themes with Mediterranean roots (fauns, nymphs, centaurs), or he metamorphosed plates and dishes into faces and bullrings.





Profiles of Women and Owl, (pink grogged earthenware, decorated with black slip)





Face, 1959, (thrown red earthenware, decorated with black slip and sgraffito)




Owl, (thrown white earthenware, decorated with red and black slips and incised)




Three Nudes on Light Ground, (thrown white earthenware, decorated with slips and oxides, incised, partial brushed transparent glaze, beige-brown patina and coloured glaze)











Owl, (thrown red earthenware, incised, decorated with slips and oxides, sgraffito and partial brushed transparent glaze and black patina).




Ring of Dancers, (thrown red earthenware, decorated with black and white slips and partial brushed transparent glaze)




Child in a Bed or Claude with Mumps, 1948, (oil on canvas)




Jacqueline, 1967, (oil on canvas)








Sun and Bull, (thrown red earthenware, decorated with slips, oxide, ceramic pastels, sgraffito and partial brushed transparent glaze)




Face, (white earthenware, decorated with oxides and dipped transparent glaze)




Two Fish, (white earthenware, decorated with slips and white glaze, dark patina)




Dancing Centaur, Black background, 1948, (lithograph)




Face of a Man, (press-moulded white earthenware, decorated with slips and oxides, gouged, punches and brushed transparent glaze)




Face of a Black Faun, (press-moulded white earthenware, decorated with slips, punched, incised and dipped transparent glaze)








Head of a Faun, (thrown white earthenware, decorated with slips and oxides and brushed transparent glaze)
 



Monday, 23 March 2026

Pablo Picasso in Barcelona - Las Meninas




Pablo Picasso, Las Meninas at the Picasso Museum, Barcelona.

Throughout his career Picasso engaged in an open dialogue with masterpieces from earlier times. He made an exhaustive analysis in the form of variations on iconic works such as Las Meninas by Diego Velazquez (1957), Women of Algiers by Eugene Lacrois (1954-55), Le Dejeuner sur L'Herbe by Edouard Manet (1950-62).




Diego Velazquez, Las Meninas, 1656.

In the summer of 1957 he set about the task of  'copying'  Las Meninas 'in my own way, forgetting about Velazquez', as he put it. The result was fifty eight works painted between 17 August and 30 December: in forty four of them he breaks down and recomposes Velasquez's painting; two are free interpretations (The Piano and a Portrait of Jacqueline Roque); nine feature the dovecote he had installed on the balcony of his studio (to see some of those go    here);  and three are small oils in which he captures the landscape of the Bay of Cannes that he could see through his studio window.




Most of these copies are to be found in the Picasso Museum. I was fascinated by them. In the same way as I have been fascinated by the original, and the fascination it has held for so many artists over the centuries. When I did my art course I tried to understand why all these artists have been obssessed with this painting. You can see some of the results of my research HERE




Las Meninas, 17 August 1957, (oil on canvas)




looking closer

Maria Augustina Sarmiento ?




looking closer




looking closer




looking closer

Infanta Margarita Maria




looking closer




looking closer

This was the only copy of the whole painting. The rest are studies of individual characters and they are below.




Las Meninas {Maria Agustina Sarmiento}, 20 and 26 August 1957, (oil and grease pencil strokes on canvas)




Las Meninas {Infanta Margarita Maria], 21 August 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas {Infanta Margarita Maria], 22 August 1957, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas {Infanta Margarita Maria], 26 August 1957, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas {Infanta Margarita Maria], 27 August 1957, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas {Infanta Margarita Maria], 27 August 1957, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas {Infanta Margarita Maria], 28 August 1957, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas {Infanta Margarita Maria], 4 September  1957, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas, 4 September 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas, 4 September 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas {Infanta Margarita Maria], 5 September  1957, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas {Infanta Margarita Maria], 6 September  1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas {Infanta Margarita Maria], 14 September  1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas [Maria Augustina Sarmiento], 10 October 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas [Maria Agustina Sarmiento and Infanta Margarida Maria], 17 September 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas, 17 September 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas, 18 September 1957, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas, 19 September 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas, 2 October 1957, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas, 3 October, 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas [Isabel de Velasco], 9 October, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas, [Maria Augustina Sarmiento], 9 October 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas [Maria Augustina Sarmiento and Infanta Margarita Maria], 10 October, (oil on canvas)




Las Meminas [Maria Agustina Sarmiento], 10 October, 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas [Maria Agustina Sarmiento], 10 October 1957, (oil on canvas)




The Piano, 17 October 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas [Nicolasito Pertusato, 24 October 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas [Usabel de Velasco, Maria Barbola i Nicolasito Pertusato], 24 October, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas [Isabel de Velasco, Maria Barbola i Nicolasito Pertusato], 24 October, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas [Isabel de Velasco, Maria Barbola i Nicolasito Pertusato, 24 October, oil on canvas)





Las Meminas [Isabel de Velasco i Maria Barbola], 8 November 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meminas [Infanta Margarida Maria i Isabel de Velasco], 15 November 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas 15 November 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas 17 November 1957, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas [Maria Agustina Sarmiento], 17 November 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas [Isabel de Velasco], 17 Nobember 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas [Isabel de Velasco], 17 Nobember 1957, (oil on canvas)





Las Meninas [Isabel de Velasco], 17 Nobember 1957, (oil on canvas)




Las Meninas [Isabel de Velasco], 17 Nobember 1957, (oil on canvas)