Weather Morning: 9°c Sunny spells Afternoon: 10°c Sunny spells

News

Pablo Picasso's Dryad, painted in 1908
London calling: Pablo Picasso's Dryad, painted in 1908

Exhibition to show how Picasso pilfered the classics

Rashid Razaq
4 Dec 2008


The National Gallery is to host a major Picasso exhibition in the New Year, it emerged today.

Seventy paintings, including 10 of his most important works, will reveal how the artist plundered the Old Masters and Impressionists.

Visitor numbers for Picasso: Challenging The Past - which will open in February - are expected to rival the 300,000 who went to see the Velásquez exhibition in 2006-07, the gallery's most successful show.

The gallery's director Nicholas Penny was forced to defend the blockbuster show after previously indicating that he would move away from "box office" exhibitions.

Last February he said major institutions should "show people something they have not seen before".

But today Mr Penny said: "I didn't really mean that I'm against putting on exhibitions of artists you have heard of. I am against putting on an exhibition of an artist simply because it will be popular. I would not be interested in putting on this exhibition if it did not teach us something about Picasso."

Mr Penny's view is that Picasso, who died in 1973 aged 91, is a "very much more uneven artist than many people realise", and he would be happy if visitors left with that impression.

"Picasso was such a radical artist that we forget that his subject matter is very classic and the topical is extremely minimal. Even with Guernica [his depiction of a Spanish town after the Germans bombed it during the Spanish Civil War] the only 20th-century thing in it is a lightbulb."

February's exhibition will include Nude with Joined Hands(1906) from the peak of Picasso's Rose period and Las Meninas, after Velázquez (1957), the first of his variations on one of the most important European paintings.

Christopher Riopelle, one of the curators, said he hoped that the exhibition would be challenging and ask difficult questions about how Picasso took inspiration from existing pieces throughout his career. He said: "Namby-pamby words like 'influence' or 'inform' fall very, very far short of what was an aggressive, thieving relationship with the past. He was cannibalising the European painting tradition."

The painter - also recognised as a draughtsman and sculptor - is best known as a co-founder of the Cubist movement but painted in a wide variety of styles. Among his most famous works are Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907) and Guernica (1937).

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Terms and conditions Make text area bigger You have  characters left.

We welcome your opinions. This is a public forum. Libellous and abusive comments are not allowed. Please read our House Rules.

For information about privacy and cookies please read our Privacy Policy.


 

 

  • David Cameron launches new crackdown on binge drinking Supermarket alcohol display David Cameron will today vow to take on the "scandal" of public drunkenness and alcohol abuse that costs the NHS £2.7 billion a year
  • Payout of £600,000 for witness put at risk by Met and CPS Scotland Yard A teenage court witness was given a £600,000 payout by the Crown Prosecution Service and Metropolitan Police after he was put at risk, it...
  • MPs to visit Falklands for military inspection HMS Dauntless MPs are to visit the Falklands amid heightened tension between Britain and Argentina
  • Commuters' favourite swaps busking for the big time with recording deal Tristan Mackay Busker Tristan Mackay has hit the jackpot after landing a record deal with an award-winning producer
  • What a smoothie! Eight-year-old Valentine gives Kate roses and a heart-shaped cupcake Kate Smoothie The Duchess of Cambridge's first Valentine's Day as a married woman was marked with roses, a card and a cupcake - but not from Prince...
  • Unemployment total set to rise by 80,000 Job Centre unemployment The Government was braced for more bad news on the jobs front today with new unemployment figures expected to show another increase,...
  • Bank to reveal inflation forecast Mervyn King The Bank of England is to give a clearer insight into how deep it expects the current downturn in the economy to sink
  • RAF airman shot in Afghanistan was 'shining star' Tomlin An RAF airman who died after being shot while on patrol in Afghanistan was a "true hero and shining star", his family said
  • Osborne defends his cuts strategy as inflation falls George Osborne Chancellor George Osborne defended his economic strategy as a fall in inflation finally brought mild relief to some from the tight squeeze...
  • Royal College students to receive scholarships courtesy of Burberry Rosie Huntington-Whitely At the luxury brand Burberry, Christopher Bailey has transformed a designer classic into must-have cool, as epitomised by the models Rosie...
  •  

    Don't Miss