Details
PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
Gros oiseau corrida (A.R. 191)
stamped, marked and numbered 'Edition Picasso / Madoura Plein Feu / 18/25' (inside the neck of the vase)
white earthenware ceramic vase with red, black and white engobe and glaze
Height: 21¾ in. (55.2 cm.)

Conceived on 22 June 1953 and executed in a numbered edition of 25
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Lot Essay

‘With ceramics the artist can demonstrate his creativity and the strength of his invention like in a painting, while additionally saving the spontaneous result born physically, materially from his hands' (Picasso quoted in F. Mathey, ‘La céramique des peintres’, Métiers d'art, October 1981, p. 110).

The present work bears the signs of Picasso’s intrepid creativity, when after the Second World War he turned to ceramics, transferring the whimsical world of his pictures and sculptures onto the shapes and vessels of Provençal pottery. Picasso had first visited the Madoura Pottery studio in Vallauris in 1946, invited by Georges and Suzanne Ramié. The pottery-making history of Vallauris went back to the Roman times, when the area was an important centre of amphorae production; in the 18th century, Vallauris revived its ancient fame with the production of kitchen earthenware.

This impressive vessel simultaneously fuses the classical with the modern: in Gros oiseau corrida (A.R 191), Picasso has manipulated the form of the classical hydria, capitalising on its ability to resemble a bird. Shifting the relation of forms, and decreasing the bird’s characteristics to a minimum, Picasso exhibits his talent in capturing character with only a few distilled lines: using the swell of the body of the vase to depict the bird’s breast and the curve of the handles to portray the spread of wings. He highlights the wings and neck of the bird with rich terracotta pigment and black engobe which can be seen to be indicative of feathers. Here, Picasso succeeds in conveying not only his unbounding imagination but also emphasises the technical accomplishment of creating such a complex and monumental ceramic piece.

Gros oiseau corrida was purchased in the early 1960s by the present owner's father and has remained in the same important Italian family ever since. It bears a particularly painterly texture and vibrant, lively surface due to the layered glazing techniques and multi part constructed form.
Post Lot Text
Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot. You must pay us an extra amount equal to the resale royalty and we will pay the royalty to the appropriate authority. Please see the Conditions of Sale for further information.

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