Pablo Picasso Ink Painting ‘Bullfight VII’ 1963
15.000,00€
Pablo Picasso Ink Painting ‘Bullfight VII’ 1963
✓ Rough ink painting on music score
This Pablo Picasso ink painting is a part of about more than 30 original drawings related to bullfighting. About 13 of them have been ‘made’ on plain white paper. All others have been made on book paper and music score.
Size: 17.1 × 27,4 cm
Description
Pablo Picasso Ink Painting ‘Bullfight VII’ 1963
✓ Rough ink painting on music score
This Pablo Picasso ink painting is a part of about more than 30 original drawings related to bullfighting. About 13 of them have been ‘made’ on plain white paper. All others have been made on book paper and music score.
Size: 17.1 × 27,4 cm
Information on Pablo Picasso
Pablo Ruiz Picasso (25 October 1881 – 8 April 1973) was a Spanish painter, sculptor, printmaker, ceramicist and theatre designer who spent most of his adult life in France.
Regarded as one of the most influential artists of the 20th century, he is known for co-founding the Cubist movement, the invention of constructed sculpture, the co-invention of collage, and for the wide variety of styles that he helped develop and explore.
Among his most famous works are the proto-Cubist Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (1907), and Guernica (1937), a dramatic portrayal of the bombing of Guernica by German and Italian air forces during the Spanish Civil War.
Picasso demonstrated extraordinary artistic talent in his early years, painting in a naturalistic manner through his childhood and adolescence.
During the first decade of the 20th century, his style changed as he experimented with different theories, techniques, and ideas.
After 1906, the Fauvist work of the slightly older artist Henri Matisse motivated Picasso to explore more radical styles, beginning a fruitful rivalry between the two artists, who subsequently were often paired by critics as the leaders of modern art.
Picasso’s work is often categorized into periods. While the names of many of his later periods are debated, the most commonly accepted periods in his work are the Blue Period (1901–1904), the Rose Period (1904–1906), the African-influenced Period (1907–1909), Analytic Cubism (1909–1912), and Synthetic Cubism (1912–1919), also referred to as the Crystal period.
Much of Picasso’s work of the late 1910s and early 1920s is in a neoclassical style, and his work in the mid-1920s often has characteristics of Surrealism.
His later work often combines elements of his earlier styles.
Exceptionally prolific throughout the course of his long life, Picasso achieved universal renown and immense fortune for his revolutionary artistic accomplishments, and became one of the best-known figures in 20th-century art.