Pablo Picasso
Denis Belgrano
Antonio Munoz Degrain
Joaquin Martinez de la Vega
Jose' Ruiz Blasco
Earliest Works. The exhibition brings together an outstanding collection of 53 works from the artist's childhood and youth. It also contains 35 works by artists such as Jose' Denis Belgrano, Antonio Munoz Degrain, Joaquin Martinez de la Vega, or Jose' Ruiz Blasco, and photographs, maps and objects that recreate the city at the time.
In the late 19th century, Malaga was a city full of contrasts. The enterprising spirit of the bourgeois classes had resulted in there being over 150 registered factories here in 1878. A large part of the population worked in them, with working hours of up to seventy hours a week. Described in travel books as “God’s paradise on earth”, this superbly located seaport suffered a series of natural disasters during this period that brought on an economic recession. The city tried to recover from this with new plans for urban growth and by promoting alternative forms of business.
This was the context in which Pablo Ruiz Picasso was born and spent his childhood. The boy grew up in a predominantly female household, surrounded by his mother, Maria Picasso, and his aunts and sisters. There was also the social circle of his father, José Ruiz Blasco, a teacher and painter who enjoyed literary and artistic gatherings and the bullfighting world, and had connections to Malaga’s artistic circles. He supervised his son’s training from very early on, introducing him to the principles of technique and composition, which the child quickly grasped. As Picasso himself recalled in 1943: “My early drawings could never have been shown at an exhibition of children’s drawings… they had barely any of the awkwardness or naivety of a child… I quickly outgrew that period of wonderful vision…”.
Portraits of his relations, lesson studies, bullfighting scenes, landscapes, still-lifes and copies of other artworks all bear testimony to those early years, when the young boy portrayed his home environment and the landscape around it to suit the aesthetic tastes of the city at that time. In 1891, the Ruiz-Picasso family left Malaga and only returned there for short periods of time. The last time Pablo Picasso visited was in 1901, in the company of his friend Carles Casagemas. By the age of twenty, his brushstrokes were gradually moving away from their early academic style and gaining a freedom that would lead him to become the great artist of the 20th century.
Picasso de Málaga. Earliest Works maps this period of the budding artist and his family. It brings together an outstanding collection of 53 works from the artist’s childhood and youth, along with a selection of works produced in his later years that invite us to reflect on the way this initial period may have left its mark on Picasso and his work.
The exhibition also contains 35 works by other artists such as José Denis Belgrano, Antonio Muñoz Degrain, Joaquín Martínez de la Vega, or the artist’s own father, José Ruiz Blasco, that reproduce the artistic atmosphere in Malaga at the time. There are also 104 documents including photographs, maps and objects that recreate the city as it stood on the threshold between two centuries.
Organized in collaboration with Museu Picasso de Barcelona, the exhibition has been enhanced thanks to contributions from private collectors in Malaga, the Museo del Prado, Museo de Málaga, the Biblioteca Nacional de España, Fundación Pablo Ruiz Picasso Museo Casa Natal, the Museo del Patrimonio Municipal and a number of international art museums. The Picasso of Malaga. Earliest Works exhibition is the first of three exhibitions held as part of the MPM´s 10th Anniversary celebrations.
PUBLICATION
Bilingual in Spanish and English, the publication contains essays by the curator, Rafael Inglada; Malén Gual, conservator of Museu Picasso de Barcelona; Natasha Staller, professor of the History of Art at Amherst College (USA); Teresa Sauret, lecturer of History of Art at Málaga University, and archaeologist Manuel Corrales. The book can be ordered at MPM Bookshop
Image: Pablo Picasso (1881-1973). Dusk over the Port of Malaga, C. 1889. © Colección particular, París © Sucesión Pablo Picasso. VEGAP, Madrid, 2013
Press department T. 952 127600 comunicacion@mpicassom.org
Museo Picasso Málaga
Palacio de Buenavista, C/ San Agustín, 8, 29015 Malaga, Spain
Opening hours:
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Friday and Saturday 10am to 9pm
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Admission fees:
Permanent collection € 6.00
Temporary exhibitions € 4.50
Combined ticket € 9.00
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