©Pablo Picasso - The ironer 1904

The Catalan Sculptor Manolo Manuel Hugué 1904 The fool 1904 The fool 1904 The ironer 1904 The room of the ironer 1904 Two figures 1904 Two friends 1904
The ironer 1904

The ironer 1904
116x73cm oil/canvas
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation
The image is only being used for informational and educational purposes

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From The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation:
Picasso’s attention soon shifted from the creation of social and quasi-religious allegories to an investigation of space, volume, and perception, culminating in the invention of Cubism. His portrait Fernande with a Black Mantilla is a transitional work. Still somewhat expressionistic and romantic, with its subdued tonality and lively brushstrokes, the picture depicts his mistress Fernande Olivier wearing a mantilla, which perhaps symbolizes the artist’s Spanish origins. The iconic stylization of her face and its abbreviated features, however, foretell Picasso’s increasing interest in the abstract qualities and solidity of Iberian sculpture, which would profoundly influence his subsequent works. Though naturalistically delineated, the painting presages his imminent experiments with abstraction.
Nancy Spector