©Pablo Picasso - Woman and pears. Fernande 1909
Woman and pears. Fernande 1909
92x70cm oil/canvas
Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA
The image is only being used for informational and educational purposes
<< Previous G a l l e r y Next >>
From Museum of Modern Art, New York:
This is one of several portraits Picasso painted of his companion, Fernande Olivier, during the summer of 1909, a period that the couple spent in Picasso's native Spain. While the pears in the background are modeled in the round, Picasso radically reconfigured Oliviers head and bust, fragmenting them into geometrical segments. This fracturing of solid volumes offered an alternative to the traditional illusionistic and perspectival approach to depicting three–dimensional space on a two–dimensional surface and suggests the direction Picasso's process would take in the development of Cubism. The slices carved into the figures neck and the diamond recesses of her eyes are replicated in the sculpture Womans Head (Fernande), which Picasso created in the fall of that year.