©Pablo Picasso - Portrait of a tailor Soler 1903
Portrait of a tailor Soler 1903
100x70cm oil/canvas
The State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia
The image is only being used for informational and educational purposes
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From The State Hermitage Museum:
In 1903 the 22-year-old Picasso made a number of portraits of his friends in Barcelona. Amongst them is this portrait of Soler, a fashionable Barcelona tailor who patronised young artists in particular financial straits. The two men were friends for a number of years, and the artist produced several portraits of the tailor. In the Hermitage portrait Picasso conveys both the artistic nature and natural elegance of Soler's appearance, and the memorable thin face, the tips of the moustache twisted upwards in the manner of a dandy. But the artist did not seek to create a representation of the sitter or his character. He sunk Soler into an intensely melancholy world of dark blue and green, untouched by any hint of sunlight, making the sitter a bearer of that "tragic sense of life" which was so much a part of his own perception of the world. In this portrait, as in the earlier "Absinthe Drinker" (Hermitage), he is looking at the theme of man's loneliness in a cafe, of loneliness in a crowd. Hence the keen sense of melancholy and the sad expression of distance on the nervous face, its transparent pallor reinforced by the dark background and clothing.