More than any other woman that Picasso desired and painted, Marie-Thรฉrรจse, with her statuesque body and strong, pure profile, fueled his imagination with a luminous dream of youth. Although her first appearances in his work were veiled references with her initials forming spare linear compositions, such as in the earliest work in the exhibition, Guitare ร la main blanche (1927), the arrival of the blond goddessโs likeness in his art announced a new love in his life. In portrayals, Picasso would stretch her robust athletic form to new extremes, metamorphosing her in endlessly inventive ways. She became the catalyst for some of his most exceptional work, from groundbreaking paintings to an inspired return to sculpture in the 1930s, according her an almost mythic stature and earning her immortality as an art historical subject. Yet her true identity remained a secret from even Picassoโs closest friends. Even after Marie-Thรฉrรจse bore their daughter Maya in 1935, Picasso would continue to divide his time between his professional life as the most famous artist in the world, and his secret family life, spending Thursdays and weekends with her and Maya and amassing a trove of love letters and snapshots exchanged while they were apart.
Following the critical and popular success of Picasso: Mosqueteros in New York in 2009 and Picasso: The Mediterranean Years in London in 2010, Gagosian Gallery in New York is pleased to present the next chapter in an ongoing exploration of Picassoโs principal themes. Picasso and Marie-Thรฉrรจse: Lโamour Fou brings together the paintings, drawings, sculptures, and prints inspired by one of Picassoโs most ideal models and enduring passions. The exhibition is curated by the eminent Picasso biographer, John Richardson, together with Marie-Thรฉrรจseโs granddaughter, art historian Diana Widmaier Picasso, who is currently preparing a catalogue raisonnรฉ of Picassoโs sculptures.
"....I have a feeling we will do
great things together."
The exhibition spans the years 1927 to 1940 and includes several works never before seen in the United States. The curators have assembled the group of more than eighty works to show a rarely articulated range of Marie-Thรฉrรจseโs influence within Picassoโs imagery, beyond recent headline-grabbing portraits. The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with a new biographical essay by John Richardson, and Diana Widmaier Picassoโs revelatory essay exploring Picassoโs portraiture, which includes dozens of never before published photographs of Marie-Thรฉrรจse from the family archives. Elizabeth Cowling, Professor Emeritus of History of Art at Edinburgh University and co-curator of the historic exhibition โMatisse Picassoโ (2002-03), has contributed an essay that examines the dissemination of images of Picassoโs sculptures through the art journals of the period.
To show Picassoโs work in a downtown contemporary art gallery creates a context that evokes the original challenges that his art presented in his own time while celebrating its enduring significance in our own. Under the direction of Valentina Castellani and installed in a dynamic transformation of the 21st Street gallery by architect Annabelle Selldorf, this unprecedented exhibition of the period will reveal Picassoโs secret muse and his l'amour fou Marie-Thรฉrรจse in a dramatic new light. www.gagosian.com