©Pablo Picasso - The shell Saint Jacques. Our future is in the air 1912

The aficionado. The torero 1912 The pigeon pea 1912 The Poet 1912 The shell Saint Jacques. Our future is in the air 1912 Violin 1912 Violin, glass, pipe and inkwell 1912 Violin 1912
The shell Saint Jacques. Our future is in the air 1912

The shell Saint Jacques. Our future is in the air 1912
38x55cm enamel and oil on canvas
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
The image is only being used for informational and educational purposes

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From The Metropolitan Museum of Art:
Bold color reentered Braque’s and Picasso’s work in spring 1912, partly in response to the Italian Futurists’ brilliantly hued canvases, which debuted in Paris earlier that year. Picasso used industrial paint to reproduce the cover of a pamphlet, “Our Future Is in the Air,” issued by the Michelin tire company to raise support for the government’s aviation program. The blue, white, and red stripes refer to the French flag. Cubists enjoyed aviation references because they viewed their art as similarly groundbreaking. As an inside joke, Braque and Picasso compared their creative partnership to that of the Wright brothers.