Picasso and the Avant-Garde in Paris
The Philadelphia Museum of Art Hosts 100+ Works by the Spanish Master
Description
Dates
February 24 – April 25, 2010
The Philadelphia Museum of Art continues its tradition of hosting major traveling exhibitions that lure art lovers from around the country with the blockbuster exhibition Picasso and the Avant-Garde in Paris, on view February 24 through April 25, 2010. The works therein, pulled from the museum’s own collection and from loans by individuals, explore the decades between 1905 and 1945 — the period some consider to be the artist’s most productive and influential.
About the Exhibition
Internationally recognized as one of the most innovative and influential artists of the twentieth century, Pablo Picasso (Spanish, 1881–1973) was at his most ferociously inventive between 1905 and 1945. Picasso and the Avant-Garde in Paris surveys his work during these crucial decades, when he transformed the history of art through his innate virtuosity and protean creativity.
The exhibition follows the trajectory of Picasso’s career from his early experiments with abstraction to his pioneering role in the development of Cubism, as well as his dialogue with Surrealism and other important art movements in the ensuing decades. The exhibition will also explore the important role that the city of Paris played in the history of modern art during the first half of the twentieth century, when artists from around the world followed Picasso’s example and moved to the French capital. It will include works by expatriate artists like Marc Chagall, Jacques Lipchitz, Patrick Henry Bruce, and Man Ray, who collectively formed a vibrant, international avant-garde group known, for posterity, as the School of Paris.
Drawn from the Museum’s extraordinary collection of paintings, sculptures, prints, and drawings by Picasso, with additional loans from private American collections, this exhibition provides a unique opportunity to reconsider the cross-fertilization of ideas that took place in Paris during one of the most experimental and creative periods in Western art. More than one hundred paintings, sculptures, and works on paper will be on view, including Picasso’s Three Musicians (1921), a grand summation of the artist’s decade-long exploration of Synthetic Cubism in which the artist seems to cast himself and his poet friends Guillaume Apollinaire and Max Jacob as players in a radical form of Cubist concert.
Tickets
Tickets for the general public become available on January 5, 2010. Members of the PMA can purchase tickets here .
Portion of description courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art
Book Your Stay
Looking to make a night of it? Book the Picasso and the Avant-Garde in Paris Hotel Package. Available at four hotels, the package includes overnight accommodations and two (2) VIP tickets to the exhibition.
Details
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Philadelphia, PA 19130
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