TORONTO.- In 2012, the
Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) will present a major survey of masterworks by the most inventive and influential artist of the 20th century, Pablo Picasso. Picasso: Masterpieces from the Musée National Picasso, Paris features more than 150 highlights from the Musées unparalleled collection, including paintings, sculptures, prints and drawings. The exhibition will be on view at the AGO for just 17 weeks, from April 28 through August 26, 2012.
The collection of the Musée National Picasso, Paris comprises more than 5,000 works that Picasso kept for himself and his family over the course of his career, ranging from informal sketchbooks to iconic masterpieces. Picasso: Masterpieces from the Musée National Picasso, Paris features is touring the world while the Musée undergoes a multi-year renovation, scheduled for completion in 2012.
Presenting Picasso masterpieces to Canadian audiences is a major accolade for our country and the Province of Ontario, said President of the AGO Board of Trustees Tony Gagliano. The AGO is most proud to host these artworks and honoured to provide the opportunity to experience one of the art worlds greatest masters.
The AGO is the sole Canadian and final venue on the tour, which includes stops in Madrid, Abu Dhabi, Tokyo, Helsinki, Moscow and St. Petersburg, Seattle, Richmond, San Francisco and Sydney.
This is an extraordinary opportunity for Canadian audiences to view major works by Picasso, drawn from the worlds most comprehensive collection of his artwork, says Matthew Teitelbaum, the AGOs Michael and Sonja Koerner Director, and CEO. With Abstract Expressionist New York, this falls Chagall and the Russian Avant-Garde, and now Picasso, AGO members and visitors have the chance to take an incredible, year-long journey through some of the most thrilling and significant moments and masterpieces of 20th-century art.
Exhibited chronologically and covering virtually every phase of the modern masters unceasingly radical and diverse career, Picasso: Masterpieces from the Musée National Picasso, Paris features:
The Death of Casagemas, one of the first works he created in Paris in 1901;
Autoportrait (Self-Portrait), the iconic 1906 self-portrait;
the 1904 Blue-period masterpiece Celestina (The Woman with One-Eye), and The Two Brothers, a 1906 work from his Rose period;
landmark African-inspired artwork that led to the advent of Cubism, including studies for the 1907 masterpiece Les Demoiselles dAvignon and Three Figures Beneath a Tree, 1907-08;
examples of his genre-defining Analytic and Synthetic Cubism artworks, including the 1909-10 Sacré Coeur, 1911s seminal Man with a Guitar and 1915s Violin;
Two Women Running on the Beach (The Race), a 1922 masterwork from his Neoclassical period, and 1925s The Kiss, from his Surrealist period;
a series of sculptures created during the Second World War, including 1942s Bulls Head, and two bronzes, 1943s Deaths Head and 1950s The Goat;
The Bathers, the 1956 life-sized, six-piece figurative sculpture series created during a summer in Cannes; and
The Matador, the famous self-portrait painted in 1970, three years before his death.
The exhibition also highlights Picassos depictions of his numerous muses and mistresses, including 1918s Portrait of Olga in an Armchair, which features the Russian ballerina and Picassos first wife seated on a Spanish tapestry, the background left purposefully unfinished. French surrealist photographer Dora Maar, who inspired his 1937 Weeping Woman series, is also prominently featured, as is Jacqueline Roque, Picassos second wife and most-painted muse, depicted in the 1954 work Jacqueline with Crossed Hands.
A dialogue about Picasso and his extraordinary career started at the AGO with the ground- breaking exhibition Picasso and Man in 1964, says Anne Baldassari, chairman and chief curator of collections of the Musée National Picasso, Paris. Now, the conversation continues with Picasso, an exhibition presenting a magnificent collection of the artists work, giving Toronto audiences a true understanding of the artists inventive and transformative legacy.