©Pablo Picasso - The kitchen 1948

Claude in the arms of his mother 1948 Claude with a ball 1948 The kitchen 1948 The kitchen 1948 Woman sitting in an armchair 1948 Claude, two years old, and his hobby horse 1949 Head of Faun 1949
The kitchen 1948

The kitchen 1948
175x250cm oil/canvas
Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA
The image is only being used for informational and educational purposes

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From Museum of Modern Art, New York:
Picasso painted The Kitchen in November 1948, on the thirty-year anniversary of the death of the poet Guillaume Apollinaire, his dear friend, and just seven days after Apollinaire's widow asked Picasso to revisit an earlier memorial project. Twenty years before, Picasso had designed the commemorative sculpture Monument to Apollinaire, but the Apollinaire Committee had deemed it too abstract to suit its purpose (a later version is on display in the Museums Sculpture Garden).
The Kitchen's wiry linearity evokes Monument to Apollinaire. Picasso used his kitchen, a large, white, empty room, as a subject in order to make a painting, he reported, "out of nothing." He created the somber, existential work at the end of a series of large-scale monochromatic paintings, including the monumental Guernica (1937), all of which depict scenes of violent turmoil. He had also recently returned from his first visit to the Nazi concentration camp in Auschwitz, Poland, and the works restricted, mute abstraction may be a response to Europe's recent atrocities as well as the loss of a great friend.