Picasso's Drawings: 1890-1921, Reinventing Tradition will be on view at The
Frick Collection starting October 4, 2011, through January 8, 2012. Pablo
Picasso (1881–1973) is generally acknowledged to be the greatest draftsman
of the twentieth century. The Frick Collection, New York, and the National
Gallery of Art, Washington D.C., have co-organized an exhibition for
2011–12 that will look at the dazzling development of Picasso's drawings,
from the precocious academic exercises of his youth in the 1890s to the
virtuoso classical works of the early 1920s. Through a selection of more than
fifty works at each venue, the presentation will examine the artist's
stylistic experiments and techniques in this roughly thirty-year period,
which begins and ends in a classical mode and encompasses the radical
innovations of Cubism and collage. The show (which opens at the Frick in the
fall of 2011 and moves on to the National Gallery of Art in February of 2012)
will demonstrate how drawing served as an essential means of invention and
discovery in Picasso's multifaceted art, while its centrality in his vast
oeuvre connects him deeply with the grand tradition of European masters.
Indeed, the exhibition will bring to the fore his complex engagement with
artists of the near and distant past and will explore the diverse ways he
competed with the virtuoso techniques of his predecessors and perpetuated
them in revitalized form. Picasso's Drawings, 1890–1921: Reinventing
Tradition will feature loans from important public and private collections in
Europe and the United States and will be accompanied by a full-length
catalogue of the same name. It is being organized by Susan Grace Galassi,
Senior Curator, The Frick Collection, and Marilyn McCully, Picasso expert, in
conjunction with Andrew Robison, Mellon Senior Curator of Prints and Drawings
at the National Gallery. For more information, please visit www.frick.org
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