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Pablo Picasso
Tête de Taureau (Minotaure), 1958
crayon on cardboard
82.8 x 72.6 cm
framed 118 x 110 x 10 cm
framed 118 x 110 x 10 cm
Copyright The Artist
Provenance
Estate of the artist
Marina Picasso, the artist’s granddaughterPicasso’s ‘Tête de Taureau (Minotaure)’ is an emblematic piece from 1958. Its status is confirmed by the prominence Picasso gave it in the drawing room of La Californie, his 1920s villa in Cannes where he long displayed it against a wall, resting on the back of a couch. Photographs show that beneath it, lying on the couch, he placed an amphora, given to him by Jacques-Yves Cousteau, France’s celebrity oceanologist. Around ‘Tête de Taureau’ were placed many paintings, including ‘Intérieur avec Femme dans un Rocking-Chair’ and ‘Nature Morte au Compotier’, both from 1956, and a bullfight painting by Claude Picasso, dedicated “Pour Mon Papa Cheri Claude”. A potent symbol of his Spanish identity, the cardboard bull’s head became an integral part of his domestic interior. Measuring 82.8cm x 76.2cm/32.6 x 28.6 in, it was certainly made by Picasso as a maquette for 'Bull', his construction in plywood and other materials, also created in 1958. The shape of the cardboard cut-out follows the still-visible outline of Picasso’s black crayon drawing of a bull’s head. He kept both the maquette and the wooden sculpture for the rest of his life. The cut-out was inherited by his grand-daughter Marina, while in 1983, marking the tenth anniversary of Picasso’s death, his widow Jaqueline donated the wooden sculpture to New York MoMA. Picasso’s ‘Bull’ had previously remained an intimate secret, never exhibited, never published. William Rubin, who had known Picasso well and was then Director of Painting and Sculpture at MoMA, was quoted in one of the museum’s press releases, dated October 11, 1983, declaring, “I was amazed when I saw this piece among the objects in Jaqueline’s share of the estate, and I thought it absolutely extraordinary.”
Publications
Helene Parmelin, 'Voyage en Picasso'. Published by Paris, R. Laffont, 1980. Ill.
Edward Quinn, Pierre Daix. 'The Private Picasso'. Published by New York Graphic Society, New York, 1987
Picasso and Perro , La Californie. 'Perro, Picasso's Dalmation, constantly followed him round' ill. p183
David Douglas Duncan'Picasso at Work Through the Lens of David Douglas Duncan'. ; Publisher, Fundación Museo Picasso Málaga. Legacy Paul, Christine and Bernard Ruiz-Picasso, 2011 ; ISBN, 8493842729, 9788493842727
- exhibition Museo Malaga 20 June - 25 September 2011. ill. p26-27
Ann Temkin and Anne Umland.Picasso Sculpture - MoMA Sept 15 - Feb 2016. Published by The Museum of Modern Art New York. Chapter 8: Wood Assemblages, Sheet Metal Sculptures, and Public Monuments, 1954 - 1973, ill. p255
David Douglas Duncan, Adieu Picasso. Villa La Californie 1957. A Retrospective. Published by Verlag Fritz Molden, Wien-München-Zürich-New York 1974. ill. p80-81
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