National Portrait Gallery: Picasso Portraits review ★★★★★
The world's favourite artist comes to the NPG: 'Picasso Portraits' London exhibition is a tender celebration, that softens the hard edges of Picasso’s Modernism
Friends, family, women and animals. This career-spanning exhibition softens the hard edges of Picasso’s Modernism, whilst hammering home his powers of representation and transformation.
Some 80 years ago, back when Modernism was young, the Old Guard of the European art scene were up in arms. This upstart Pablo Picasso, with his frenetic distortions of the human form, had replaced the clean lines of Greek Classicism with a hideous, fragmented mess. A head’, said Picasso, ‘is a matter of eyes, nose, mouth, which can be distributed in any way you like’. It was a hideous and dehumanising attack on beauty.
We know now that Cubism changed the course of art history. But sometimes, looking at a Modernist portrait, the viewer can feel disorientated. The subjects are fractured and reassembled, barely recognisable as human. And yet portraiture is the most intimate of painting genres, which binds together painter, viewer and subject.
Detail: Portrait of Olga Picasso by Pablo Picasso, 1923; Private Collection Copyright: Succession Picasso/DACS London, 2016
As this accessible, tender National Portrait Gallery show demonstrates, abstraction and portraiture can coexist, when it is Picasso holding the paint brush. Unlike his contemporaries, he never took commissions – meaning he enjoyed complete stylistic freedom.
Picasso’s personal acquaintances are his subjects, but his feelings towards them are as much a part of the work. Take his lovers, for instance. The curvaceous Marie-Thérèse Walter, Picasso’s mistress from 1927 to the mid ‘30s, is presented throughout the exhibition as sensuous and fecund. Her form is rendered in rounded arcs, her palette jewel-bright.
And then we have the tempestuous Dora Maar, Marie-Thérèse’s darker successor. The portraits of her are more closed, mysterious and inky. The colours of the world: white, yellow, red, blue, green, pink and black flicker across her face.
Woman in a Hat (Olga) by Pablo Picasso, 1935; Centre Pompidou, Paris.
There is also an entire room dedicated to portraits of Picasso’s first wife, Olga Kokhlova. The first painting you notice is a rather conservative, straight-talking classical piece. Olga sits in an armchair, light falling across her face. Muted, in neutral tones, it could’t be further from his tortured nudes.
On the opposite wall hangs Woman in a Hat (above). Painted as his marriage to Kohklova was cracking apart, the piece is sickly and dehumanising. Olga’s face is ghastly in white and septic green, her eyes black and staring, her hat – mockingly painted after the trends of the day – droops. Her mouth is a gash of misery. Picasso has destroyed, in Cubist flagrance, the former image of his wife. The emotional impact of this image is staggering.
Detail: Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, autumn 1910 by Pablo Picasso, 1910; Art Institute of Chicago
There are some very famous works on display. Half-way through, you encounter the legendary Cubist portrait from 1910 of the German art dealer and early champion of Picasso’s work, Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. This vibrating jumble of grey cubes is an extraordinarily powerful example of the movement. We can make out the sitter’s hands and face, and from there the different shapes align themselves – our eyes reconstruct the subject. Picasso’s 1906 Self-Portrait with Palette greets you like an old friend, while 1941’s Woman in a Hat, with its schizophrenic double face, sings of the horrors of Nazi-occupied Paris.
Detail: Self-Portrait with Palette by Pablo Picasso, 1906.
Some of the most lovable work, though, comes courtesy of Picasso’s drawings and caricatures, which dominate the first section of the exhibition (perhaps wrongly – despite their charm, they make for a rather pallid opening). The artist was forever doodling – dashing off erotic cartoons or lovingly cruel sketches of friends. Some of them make you laugh aloud.
What you take away from this show is Picasso's ability to express emotion pictorially. Whether this be the personality of his subject, or his mood on a given day, each work on show possesses some characteristic both immediate and essential. A good portrait is much more than a good likeness. They are not ‘of people’, they are about people.
A must-see.
An erotic doodle
Some 80 years ago, back when Modernism was young, the Old Guard of the European art scene were up in arms. This upstart Pablo Picasso, with his frenetic distortions of the human form, had replaced the clean lines of Greek Classicism with a hideous, fragmented mess. A head’, said Picasso, ‘is a matter of eyes, nose, mouth, which can be distributed in any way you like’. It was a hideous and dehumanising attack on beauty.
We know now that Cubism changed the course of art history. But sometimes, looking at a Modernist portrait, the viewer can feel disorientated. The subjects are fractured and reassembled, barely recognisable as human. And yet portraiture is the most intimate of painting genres, which binds together painter, viewer and subject.
Detail: Portrait of Olga Picasso by Pablo Picasso, 1923; Private Collection Copyright: Succession Picasso/DACS London, 2016
As this accessible, tender National Portrait Gallery show demonstrates, abstraction and portraiture can coexist, when it is Picasso holding the paint brush. Unlike his contemporaries, he never took commissions – meaning he enjoyed complete stylistic freedom.
Picasso’s personal acquaintances are his subjects, but his feelings towards them are as much a part of the work. Take his lovers, for instance. The curvaceous Marie-Thérèse Walter, Picasso’s mistress from 1927 to the mid ‘30s, is presented throughout the exhibition as sensuous and fecund. Her form is rendered in rounded arcs, her palette jewel-bright.
And then we have the tempestuous Dora Maar, Marie-Thérèse’s darker successor. The portraits of her are more closed, mysterious and inky. The colours of the world: white, yellow, red, blue, green, pink and black flicker across her face.
Woman in a Hat (Olga) by Pablo Picasso, 1935; Centre Pompidou, Paris.
There is also an entire room dedicated to portraits of Picasso’s first wife, Olga Kokhlova. The first painting you notice is a rather conservative, straight-talking classical piece. Olga sits in an armchair, light falling across her face. Muted, in neutral tones, it could’t be further from his tortured nudes.
On the opposite wall hangs Woman in a Hat (above). Painted as his marriage to Kohklova was cracking apart, the piece is sickly and dehumanising. Olga’s face is ghastly in white and septic green, her eyes black and staring, her hat – mockingly painted after the trends of the day – droops. Her mouth is a gash of misery. Picasso has destroyed, in Cubist flagrance, the former image of his wife. The emotional impact of this image is staggering.
Detail: Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, autumn 1910 by Pablo Picasso, 1910; Art Institute of Chicago
There are some very famous works on display. Half-way through, you encounter the legendary Cubist portrait from 1910 of the German art dealer and early champion of Picasso’s work, Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. This vibrating jumble of grey cubes is an extraordinarily powerful example of the movement. We can make out the sitter’s hands and face, and from there the different shapes align themselves – our eyes reconstruct the subject. Picasso’s 1906 Self-Portrait with Palette greets you like an old friend, while 1941’s Woman in a Hat, with its schizophrenic double face, sings of the horrors of Nazi-occupied Paris.
Detail: Self-Portrait with Palette by Pablo Picasso, 1906.
Some of the most lovable work, though, comes courtesy of Picasso’s drawings and caricatures, which dominate the first section of the exhibition (perhaps wrongly – despite their charm, they make for a rather pallid opening). The artist was forever doodling – dashing off erotic cartoons or lovingly cruel sketches of friends. Some of them make you laugh aloud.
What you take away from this show is Picasso's ability to express emotion pictorially. Whether this be the personality of his subject, or his mood on a given day, each work on show possesses some characteristic both immediate and essential. A good portrait is much more than a good likeness. They are not ‘of people’, they are about people.
A must-see.
An erotic doodle
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What | National Portrait Gallery: Picasso Portraits review |
Where | National Portrait Gallery, St Martin's Place, London, WC2H 0HE | MAP |
Nearest tube | Charing Cross (underground) |
When |
06 Oct 16 – 05 Feb 17, Opening hours Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Saturday, Sunday: 10.00 – 18.00, Late Opening: Thursday, Friday: 10.00 – 21.00 |
Price | £19 / Concessions £17.50 The first 100 tickets for every Friday morning during the exhibition are just £5 |
Website | Click here for more information |