Details
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
Salomé, from: La Suite des Saltimbanques
drypoint, 1905, on Arches laid paper, a fine and early impression of Baer's third, final state, before steel-facing, printed by Auguste Delâtre, Paris, circa 1905 (before the edition of 250 published in 1913 by Ambroise Vollard, after the plate had been steel-faced)
Plate 398 x 346 mm.
Sheet 554 x 451 mm.
Provenance
Max Pellequer, Paris; then by descent.
With Bouquinerie de l’Institut, Paris.
Acquired from the above on 17 July 2000.
Literature
Bloch 14; Baer 17IIIa
Special notice
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.
Please note this lot is the property of a consumer. See H1 of the Conditions of Sale.
Sale Room Notice
Please note that the reserve on this lot has been lowered to £60,000.
Brought to you by
Alexandra GillSenior Specialist
A Christie's specialist may contact you to discuss this lot or to notify you if the condition changes prior to the sale.View condition report

Lot Essay

The present work is part of the remarkable Suite des Saltimbanques, a series of fifteen etchings which appeared at a pivotal moment in Picasso's early career; the shift from the melancholic Blue period to the lighter Rose, during 1904-05. The overarching theme, that of the travelling acrobats or saltimbanques, had preoccupied Picasso since he encountered them in the Place des Invalides earlier in 1904. The change in Picasso’s mood was due in no small part to his friendship with Guillaume Apollinaire, and the profound influence the poet had on his imagination. As John Richardson says in A Life of Picasso, 'He encouraged [Picasso] to picture himself in different roles, the self-dramatizing role of a saltimbanque....the picturesque outcast at odds with conventional society'. The influence was clearly reciprocal, and many of Apollinaire’s poems of the period appear almost to be texts for Picasso's illustrations.

The Salomé story was a favorite subject of French art and literature in the latter half of the nineteenth century, although why Picasso included it as part of the Saltimbanques series is something of a mystery. Both Picasso and Apollinaire boldly reimagined the biblical tale, interpreting it in their own distinctive ways. Apollinaire’s poem, also titled Salomé, appeared in Vers et Prose (which was edited by their mutual friend André Salmon) in the same year as the etching. This connection has led Richardson to surmise that the Suite des Saltimbanques may have been originally intended to illustrate Apollinaire’s poem: "The Salomé drypoint echoes the mocking mood of Apollinaire’s lines on the same subject: ‘Weep not, pretty jester to the king /Take this head instead of cap and bells and dance’" (J. Richardson, A Life of Picasso: The Prodigy, 1881-1906, New York, NY, 2007, p. 334.)

Regardless of his intention, Picasso’s etching reveals an early propensity for sexual subjects in his prints, a proclivity that would become more apparent as he matured. Salomé is shockingly nude (she is traditionally depicted in several layers of jewels and veils), kicking her leg into the air and fully exposing herself to her stepfather Herod, who seems to be looking at the viewer with a wry smile on his face. Behind him, Salomé’s mother Herodias, who had asked her daughter to dance for her husband in order to trick him into ordering the execution of John the Baptist (whom she loved), averts her eyes. Her position ‘over’ Herod, but hiding behind him, implies the power imbalance in the exchange, as well as Herod’s ignorance of her machinations. Below, in an anachronous vignette, a servant watches the dance while holding the prophet’s head on a platter. The plump figure representing Herod appears several times within Picasso’s paintings, drawings, watercolors, and prints of the period and was modeled after a saltimbanque Picasso befriended. Whilst Salomé is unrelated to the wider theme of the suite it shares the sparse composition and delicately lined figures of other plates in the series. The lines that run across the middle of the composition from the left to the right center are a result of Picasso’s use of a previously etched plate, a common practice for him during his early years of poverty. However, they have the added effect of focusing attention on the girl’s provocative gesture.

Very few impressions were printed at the time of the plate's creation and a proper edition was only issued in 1913 as part of the series of fifteen etchings, La Suite des Saltimbanques, published by the art dealer Ambroise Vollard. Before printing this edition, Vollard had the plates steel-faced, a process whereby they were electroplated with a thin layer of steel, hardening them so that they could be printed in larger numbers. As a consequence the etched lines lose depth and the plates print less strongly, losing much of the subtleties and nuances of the images. It is only in early impressions like this one, before steel-facing, that the drypoint burr, particularly noticeable in the Saint’s head and hair, the figure of the servant, and the contours of Salomé, and the delicate burnished highlights on her face and breasts, can be fully appreciated.

It is not know exactly how many impressions of Salomé were printed by Delâtre in 1905 - Brigitte Baer knew of one impression each of the first and second states, and approximately twenty of the third, final state, of which three are in public collections: Baltimore Museum (unsigned); Musée Picasso, Paris (unsigned); and Norton Simon Museum (unsigned). According to our records only three early impressions have been offered at auction in the last thirty years.

Related Articles

Sorry, we are unable to display this content. Please check your connection.

More from
Prints and Multiples
Place your bid Condition report

A Christie's specialist may contact you to discuss this lot or to notify you if the condition changes prior to the sale.

I confirm that I have read this Important Notice regarding Condition Reports and agree to its terms. View Condition Report