An overview of the artist's oeuvre based on the different studios where he worked and lived. The exhibition brings together nearly 80 canvases, 60 drawings and prints, 20 photographs and more than a dozen of the artist's palettes. Contemporary an exhibition dedicated to the drawings of Jacopo Carracci (1494-1557), better known as Pontormo and considered one of the greatest exponents of Mannerism.
Curated by María Teresa Ocaña i Gomà
From 12 February to 11 May 2014, FUNDACIÓN MAPFRE'S exhibition halls
(Paseo de Recoletos, 23, 28004 Madrid) will host the show entitled
PICASSO: IN THE STUDIO, an overview of this artist's oeuvre based on the
different studios where he worked and lived.
The exhibition brings together nearly 80 canvases, 60 drawings and prints,
20 photographs and more than a dozen of the artist's palettes which show
how Picasso's studio became the centre of gravity of his entire creative
universe, the place where art and life were
interwoven in his work.
Picasso: In the Studio contains pieces
from around 25 prestigious public and
private institutions. Many of the works
were loaned by private collections and
have rarely been publicly exhibited,
making this show a unique opportunity to
enjoy them. The exhibition has also been
made possible thanks to the support of
major museums in Spain and abroad,
including the Philadelphia Museum of Art,
the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Indiana
University Art Museum, the Phillips
Collection (Washington, DC), the Centre
Georges Pompidou (Paris), the Tate
(London), the Israel Museum (Jerusalem),
the Bridgestone Art Museum (Tokyo), the
National Museum of Modern Art (Kyoto),
the Pushkin State Museum of Fine Arts
(Moscow), the Museo Nacional Centro de
Arte Reina Sofía (Madrid) and the Museu
Picasso (Barcelona).
The show opens with the famous Self-portrait with Palette from 1906
(Philadelphia Museum of Art) and closes with another self-portrait from
1969, Homme au tabouret, whose only public showing was in the first
exhibition held at the Palais des Papes d'Avignon in 1970. These two
works, in which Picasso depicts himself as a painter, gazing fixedly at the
viewer, are separated by more than 60 years of artistic activity, during
which the artist worked at different studios in the Bateau-Lavoir, Boulevard
de Clichy, Boulevard Raspail, La Boétie, Boisgeloup, La Californie and
finally Mougins. In every case, his studio became a place for
experimentation and a stimulus of reflections on the artist's work and ritual
in pictorial tradition. His studios became "interior landscapes", as Picasso
called them, inner sanctums that chronicle the history of his stylistic and
iconographic mutations.
A scientific catalogue has been published to accompany this exhibition which
contains reproductions of every work in the show and offers an in-depth analysis
of the importance of the studio as a place of experimentation for Picasso. The
catalogue features original essays by Maite Ocaña, Brigitte Léal, Valeriano
Bozal, Christopher Green, Neil Cox and Leyre Bozal.
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Pontormo
Dibujos
Curator: Kosme de Barañano
From 12 February to 11 May 2014, FUNDACIÓN MAPFRE'S exhibition halls
(Paseo de Recoletos 23, 28004 Madrid) will host an exhibition dedicated to the
drawings of Jacopo Carracci (1494-1557), better known as PONTORMO and
considered one of the greatest exponents of “Mannerism”.
The show will feature a carefully chosen array of 69 drawings—the majority
loaned by the Galleria degli Uffizi in Florence, though other prestigious
European museums such as the Staatliche Graphische Sammlung in Munich
and the Vienna Albertina have also contributed to this selection—which
document every stage in Pontormo's career and all the different drawing media
he used.
The exhibition consists of 60 drawings by Pontormo as well as nine drawings by
other great artists such as Dürer, Lorenzo di Credi, Poussin and Tiepolo, which
have been included so that visitors can compare and contrast their different
approaches to draughtsmanship and appreciate the originality of the Florentine
artist's style.
The selected drawings will also be accompanied by a rare gem: Pontormo's
Diary, held at the Biblioteca Nazionale Centrale in Florence, which has never
been shown outside Italy until now. This journal contains writings and small
sketches by the artist, created during the last years of his life, about his
obsessions, his routines and his desire to draw in seclusion, and as such it is a
unique testament to the legend of Pontormo as an artiste maudit.
This will be the first show of Pontormo's work ever held in Spain, organised to
coincide with the 520o anniversary of the artist's birth. Meanwhile, in March the
Palazzo Strozzi plans to inaugurate an exhibition about Pontormo and his friend
Rosso Fiorentino that will focus on his paintings. Thus, Florence and Madrid
have joined forces to celebrate this singular commemorative year.
This exhibition is further proof of the particular importance that FUNDACIÓN
MAPFRE attaches to drawing, as the only Spanish institution whose art
collection is dedicated exclusively to works on paper and which regularly
organises shows featuring this genre.
Pontormo ranks among the most extravagant and extraordinary artists in the
history of art. His obsessive, neurotic personality and wild mood swings,
documented by Vasari, soon earned him a reputation as an artiste maudit.
Pontormo's astoundingly prolific corpus of
drawings, primarily held in the Gabinetto
Disegni e Stampe degli Uffizi, has
contributed
to
the
aura
of
legend
surrounding this artist, as many consider
his works on paper to be the expression
of the painter's prima idea, concentrating
the essence of his tortured soul. It seems
undeniable that Pontormo used the paper
format to explore ideas and work out his
goals for more ambitious undertakings;
however, he also turned to drawing as a
pleasurable outlet for pent-up emotions, a
kind of relaxing treat for the spirit.
With regard to technique, Pontormo primarily used black and red pencil, almost
always with white chalk, but he also experimented with ink, bistre and washes,
and for more detailed drawings he preferred to use sanguine crayon.
The fact that Pontormo trained alongside great Italian Renaissance masters
allowed him to experiment with different ways of drawing. His early
apprenticeship to Leonardo da Vinci taught him to appreciate drawing as an
exercise in private creativity, where an artist could express himself more freely.
Pontormo's contact and later empathy with Piero di Cosimo encouraged the
artist to develop his powers of imagination and fantasy. During his time at the
Certosa di Galluzzo, while still absorbing the drawing techniques of his masters,
Pontormo came across the prints of Albrecht Dürer, which his friend Rosso Fiorentino had already discovered, and the influence of this German master
would become apparent in his preparatory studies for The Crucifixion. Andrea
del Sarto, with whom Pontormo completed his first major public commissions,
later became the greatest influence on his work. During his final years, while
working on the project for the Church of San Lorenzo, Pontormo's drawings
acquired a grandiose spirituality reminiscent of the style of Michelangelo.
The drawings in this exhibition cover every stage in the artist's career, from his
work as an apprentice at Poggio a Caiano (1519-1521) to his final creations for
the Church of San Lorenzo in Florence (1545-1556). Exemplary illustrations of
Pontormo's early and late styles are present in his preparatory drawings for the
works at the Certosa di Galluzzo (1522-1525), and his designs for the Capponi
Chapel in the church of Santa Felicita (1526-1530).
The most important drawings in the show are those related to the Church of
San Lorenzo in Florence. Pontormo worked almost exclusively on the project
for this religious building from 1545 until his death in 1556. Cosimo I de' Medici
commissioned him to devise eight scenes, seven from the Old Testament and
one from the New, to decorate the architecture designed by Brunelleschi.
Throughout this project, Pontormo eschewed a temporal presentation of the
scenes, striving instead to create symbolic contrasts that reinforced his ideas
about faith.
His drawings from this period portray different versions of the same story and
were treated as isolated compositions. Thanks to this approach, we can see
how the scenes developed and matured in the artist's mind, and how drawing
gradually became the channel through which Pontormo expressed different
views of these intensely spiritual subjects.
In terms of their plastic quality, the San Lorenzo drawings illustrate the extreme
Mannerism that characterised Pontormo’s final years. Nowhere is his use of the
S-curve and mind-boggling distortions more striking or glorious than in his
studies for the Flood and the Resurrection. These works are the silent screams
of a deeply spiritual, painter who strove to express his anguish, dissatisfaction
and constant quest for God.
While preparing this final commission,
between 1554 and 1556 Pontormo kept a
detailed diary in which he jotted down his
daily routines, meals, aches and pains and
other mundane information. However, the
Diary also records his fear of death, his
deep-seated spiritual convictions and the
desire to find release for his soul through
pencil and paper. The critical fortune of
this Diary has always been linked to the
perception of Pontormo as an artiste
maudit. Now, for the first time, it is leaving
Florence to appear in an exhibition.
A scientific catalogue has been published to accompany this exhibition which
contains reproductions of every work on display, with complete catalogue
details for each, and essays by the show's curator, Kosme de Barañano, Pablo
Jiménez Burillo and Benito Navarrete. The catalogue also includes a Spanish
translation of Pontormo's Diary by Isabel Prieto and a biography and
bibliography of the artist.
Exhibition organized by FUNDACIÓN
MAPFRE in collaboration with Soprintendenza
Speciale per il Polo Museale Fiorentino,
Gabinetto Disegni e Stampe degli Uffizi,
Florence.
Image: Picasso Autorretrato con paleta,
1906.
Óleo sobre lienzo, 91.9 x 73.3 cm
A.E. Gallatin Collection, 1950.
Philadelphia Museum of Art.
© Sucesión Pablo Picasso, VEGAP,
Madrid, 2014
For further information, please contact Alejandra Fernández or Nuria del Olmo in MAPFRE'S
Communications Department. TEL. +34 915818464/ +34 690049112 alejandra@fundacionmapfre.org - ndelolm@fundacionmapfre.org
Opening 11 February, 5-9 pm
FUNDACIÓN MAPFRE Auditorium
Paseo de Recoletos, 23 Madrid
Hours:
Mon 14.00 - 20.00 hrs.
Tue - Sat 10.00 - 20.00 hrs.
Sun 11.00 - 19.00 hrs.
Entrance free