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JUNE 13–SEPTEMBER 12, 2010


the ballet: Homage and humor


Degas was known to Picasso's generation as "The Painter of Dancers." Picasso showed little interest in ballet as a young man, but later a growing fascination with Degas's art gradually extended to his dance imagery. During Picasso's early years in Paris, he made several startling responses to Degas's celebrated Little Dancer Aged Fourteen, probably known to Picasso through hearsay and reproductions of its preparatory studies. He also became more familiar with Degas's ballet pictures when large numbers were displayed in Paris after the artist's death in 1917. By this date Picasso was working on stage and costume designs for the ballet impresario Serge Diaghilev, and had met his future wife, the ballerina Olga Khokhlova. Just as Degas had depicted dancers on the stage and in the classroom, Picasso made studies of Olga and the Diaghilev company. Roughly a decade later, Picasso also created a series of small plaster figures that can be seen as bathers or ballerinas, some recalling bronzes by Degas he had seen at a 1931 exhibition.


Picasso Looks at Degas

By Elizabeth Cowling and Richard Kendall
With additional contributions by Cécile Godefroy, Sarah Lees, and Montse Torras

The great Spanish painter and sculptor Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) exhibited a lifelong fascination—some might say "obsession"—with the work and personality of French artist Edgar Degas (1834–1917). In this groundbreaking study, noted Degas scholar Richard Kendall and Picasso expert Elizabeth Cowling present well-documented instances of Picasso's direct responses to Degas's work, as well as more conceptual and challenging affinities between their oeuvres. Richly illustrated essays explore the artists' parallel interests in subjects including modern urban life, ballet dancers, and intimate activities such as bathing, as well as in the mediums of photography and sculpture. The book also provides the first extended analysis of Picasso's engagement with Degas's art in his final years, when he acquired several of the French artist's brothel monotypes and reworked some of them in his own prints. Offering many fresh ideas and a significant amount of new material about two of the most popular and influential artists of the modern era, this handsome book promises to make a lasting contribution to the literature on both artists.

Elizabeth Cowling is Professor Emeritus of History of Art at Edinburgh University, and an independent scholar and exhibition curator. Richard Kendall is Curator-at-Large at the Clark, as well as an independent scholar and exhibition curator. Cécile Godefroy is a researcher at the Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso para el Arte in Madrid. Sarah Lees is Associate Curator of European Art at the Clark. Montse Torras is Exhibitions Coordinator at the Museu Picasso in Barcelona.

368 pages, 11 1/2 x 9 1/2 inches
310 color and 9 black-and-white illustrations
2010
Published by the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute
and the Museu Picasso, Barcelona
ISBN 978-0-300-13412-4
ISBN 978-0-931102-86-8