HomePicasso's Drawings, 1890-1921: Reinventing Tradition
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Picasso's Drawings, 1890-1921: Reinventing Tradition

hardcoverNovember 29, 2011
Regular price $70.86 USD
Regular price Sale price $70.86 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Secure Checkout
Quality Guaranteed
New In Stock
ISBN-13: 9780300170733 ISBN-10: 0300170734
Publisher
Yale University Press
Binding
hardcover
Published
November 29, 2011
Weight
3.9 lbs
Dimensions
28.60×3.20×23.50 cm

About this book

Picasso's Drawings, 1890-1921: Reinventing Tradition by McCully, Marilyn. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780300170733.

A fresh perspective on the importance of Picassos drawing practice and how he used his materials and graphic techniques to reinterpret past traditions and invigorate his art Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) is acknowledged as one of the greatest draftsmen of the 20th century. Picassos Drawings, 1890-1921 follows the dazzling development of his drawing practice from the precocious academic exercises of his youth to his renewal of classicism in his virtuoso output of the early 1920s. A selection of more than seventy works on paper, with extended entries, highlights his stylistic experiments and techniques during this roughly thirty-year period, which begins and ends in a classical mode and encompasses his most radical innovations. An essay by Susan Grace Galassi provides a detailed study of Picassos drawing practice and explores his interest in the Old Masters, and Marilyn McCully considers the early critical responses to Picassos drawings. These discussions of Picassos style, sources, and techniques demonstrate how drawing served as an essential means of invention and discovery for the artist. This book brings to the fore Picassos engagement with artists of the past and the ways in which he perpetuated, competed with, and ultimately reinvented the practices of his artistic mentors on his own terms. Through emulation, allusion, dissection, and outright hijacking, Picasso continued the grand tradition of drawing in a revitalized form. This study reveals the extent to which the artist relied on drawing as a means of synthesizing past and present, tradition and innovation, to give his own art a bold and vigorous expression. Published in associaton with The Frick Collection Exhibition Schedule: The Frick Collection, New York (10/04/11-01/08/12) National Gallery of Art, Washington (02/05/12-05/06/12)