Printmaking was a vitally important activity in the long artistic career of Spanish artist Pablo Picasso (1881–1973). His long-standing, if at times episodic, engagement with printmaking, stretched from his early years in Paris until his old age. This book explores how the technical challenges of working in different print media (etching, aquatint, linocut and lithography) inspired Picasso’s creativity.
Together with a stunning selection of works on paper by Picasso, it also includes sculptures, drawings and prints by other artists and cultures of the kind that inspired Picasso. His prints often demonstrate his keen sense of belonging to an artistic lineage stretching back to antiquity (stemming from his kinship with the Mediterranean world of his birthplace, Málaga), as well as great artists of the past such as Raphael, Rembrandt and Ingres. One section explores the contradictions and controversies relating to Picasso’s relationships with his wives and lovers. The focus on Picasso as a printmaker will argue for the importance of this activity in his long artistic career, and his continued relevance as one of the most creative and experimental talents ever to explore the medium of print.
Foreword Introduction
Chronology of Picasso’s career through printmaking
• The past
• Women
• Beasts
• The Mediterranean
• The artist
Notes, Select bibliography Credits, Acknowledgements, Index