Through Sunday, February 7
Picasso Sculpture is a sweeping survey of Pablo
Picasso’s innovative and influential work in three dimensions. This will be the
first such museum exhibition in the United States in nearly half a century.Over the
course of his long career, Picasso devoted himself to sculpture wholeheartedly,
if episodically, using both traditional and unconventional materials and
techniques. Unlike painting, in which he was formally trained and through which
he made his living, sculpture occupied a uniquely personal and experimental
status for Picasso. He approached the medium with the freedom of a self-taught
artist, ready to break all the rules. This attitude led him to develop a deep
fondness for his sculptures, to which the many photographs of his studios and
homes bear witness. Treating them almost as members of his household, he
cherished the sculptures' company and enjoyed re-creating them in a variety of
materials and situations. Picasso kept the majority in his private possession
during his lifetime. It was only in 1966, through the large Paris retrospectiveHommage à
Picasso, that the public became fully aware of this side of his
work. Following that exhibition, in 1967 The Museum of Modern Art organized The Sculpture of Picasso, which
until now was the first and only exhibition on this continent to display a
large number of the artist’s sculptures.
Picasso Sculpture focuses on
the artist’s lifelong work with sculpture, with a particular focus on his use
of materials and processes. The exhibition, which features more than 100
sculptures, complemented by selected works on paper and photographs, aims to
advance the understanding of what sculpture was for Picasso, and of how he
revolutionized its history through a lifelong commitment to constant
reinvention. The exhibition is organized in chapters corresponding to the
distinct periods during which Picasso devoted himself to sculpture, each time
exploring with fresh intensity the modern possibilities of this ancient art form.
http://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/1505
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