Sale: 600 / Evening Sale, Dec. 05. 2025 in Munich button next Lot 125001210

 

125001210
Pablo Picasso
La femme au tambourin, 1939.
Etching and aquatint and scraper
Estimate:
€ 450,000 - 650,000

 
$ 522,000 - 754,000

Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
Pablo Picasso
1881 - 1973

La femme au tambourin. 1939.
Etching and aquatint and scraper.
Signed and numbered "30/30". From an edition of 30 copies. On Arches wove paper (with watermark). 66.4 x 51.1 cm (26.1 x 20.1 in). Sheet: 76 x 56,5 cm (29,9 x 22,2 in).
Published by Galerie Louise Leiris, Paris 1943.

• Compelling, picturesque, and in a large format: an outstanding example of Picasso's undisputed mastery of drawing and printmaking.
• Alongside “La Minotauromachie” (1935) and “La femme qui pleure” (1937), “La femme au tambourin” (1939) is one of the artist's most important individual prints.
• From the best creative period: Made shortly after the famous painting “Guernica” (1937), which takes the emotional permeation and dissolution of human physicality to the extreme.
• Art and Eros: Captivating testimony to the intoxicating and disruptive love between Picasso and his young muse Dora Maar.
• Rarity: Most copies of this etching are museum-owned and hence rarely offered on the international auction market.
• Renowned provenance: From the collections of George Bloch and Marina Picasso, the artist's granddaughter.
• Other copies are in, among others, the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/Basel, and the Berggruen Collection, Berlin
.

PROVENANCE: Artist's estate.
Collection of Marina Picasso, the artist's granddaughter (until around 1983/84).
Georges Bloch Collection (1901-1984), author of the first catalogue raisonné of prints (directly from the artist, before 1983, with the collector's stamp on the reverse).
Jan Krugier Gallery, New York (after 1987, with the cut-out gallery label on the back of the frame).
Private collection, USA (probably acquired from the above, until 1998, Christie's, New York).
Private collection, Southern Germany (acquired from the above in 1998).

EXHIBITION: Brigitte Baer, Picasso the printmaker: Graphics from the Marina Picasso Collection, Dallas Museum of Art, Sep. 11-Oct. 30, 1983, The Brooklyn Museum, Nov. 23, 1983-Jan. 8, 1984, The Detroit Institute of Arts, Jan. 31-Mar. 25, 1984, The Denver Art Museum, Apr. 7-May 30, 1984, cat. no. 71, p. 115 (the present copy illustrated).

LITERATURE: Brigitte Baer, Picasso Peintre-Graveur, vol. III, Bern 1986, CR no. 646 V B a, pp. 156-161 (illustrated on p. 161, different copy).
Georges Bloch, Pablo Picasso, Catalogue de l'oeuvre gravé et lithographié 1904-1967, Bern 1968, CR no. 310, p. 92 (illustrated, different copy).
- -
Christie`s, Nineteenth and twentieth century prints, New York, April 28, 1998, cat. no. 414 (the present copy illustrated).
“She is a vision that embodies the spirit of a maenad in a sensual fleeting movement. [..] Technically speaking, the print is also a masterpiece. First, because of the economy of its means, and second, because of the solution to all the technical difficulties associated with the uniform grain and etching of such a large plate [..]."
Brigitte Baer,

“For me, she [Dora Maar] is the weeping woman [.]. For years I painted her in tormented forms, not out of sadism or pleasure, but only because I obeyed a vision [.].”
Pablo Picasso, quoted from Francoise Gilot, Life with Picasso, New York, 1964, p. 122.

Picasso's most famous muse, Dora Maar, was young, beautiful, intelligent, sensual, self-confident, and vulnerable. Their intoxicating yet destructive relationship pushed Picasso to new emotional and artistic extremes. In 1935, Picasso met the 25-year-younger artist and photographer Dora Maar at the Café des Deux Magots in Paris, and she soon became his lover. Officially, Picasso was still married to Olga at this point, and his previous lover, Marie-Thérèse Walter, gave birth to their daughter Maya the same year. But the fateful affair that Picasso embarked upon with Dora Maar was to go down in art history as one of the most significant episodes of Modernism. The intensity and pain of this relationship, which for many years was an emotionally charged love triangle involving Picasso, Dora Maar, and Marie-Thérèse Walter, brought forth works of outstanding artistic significance. It was during this period that his most compelling creations were born: the female figures and portraits inspired by Dora Maar.
From the outset, it was the female nude and human physiognomy that captivated Picasso, and he soon made them his artistic trademark by dissecting them in a cubist manner. However, during his years with Dora Maar, which coincided with the bitter years of the Spanish Civil War and World War II, Picasso not only took the Cubist dissection of typical of previous years to extremes, but also achieved an emotional depth in his portrayal of the human physiognomy that remains unmatched to this day. It was not until the second half of the century that artists such as Francis Bacon and Maria Lassnig finally found ways to continue the psychological deformation of the human form in their art.
Besides the deep emotional quality that Picasso expresses in portraits of Dora Maar that transcend the human form, Picasso's famous anti-fascist war painting “Guernica” (1937, Museo Reina Sofía, Madrid) is also worth mentioning in this context. Equally inspired by Dora Maar, it is a captivating account of the human experience of pain and suffering on canvas. The contorted faces of the screaming mother with her dead child, the burning and the fleeing woman, continue to haunt us to this day. Picasso's famous series of portraits of the weeping woman, “La femme qui pleure,” based on the model Dora Maar, was also created in direct connection with “Guernica.” The most famous versions of these paintings are now in the collections of the Tate Modern in London and the Beyeler Collection in Riehen/Basel. The drypoint etching with the same motif and title, which Picasso also executed with technical perfection in 1937, is now considered one of the artist's most important individual prints, alongside the present work “La femme au tambourin.” It is not surprising that copies of these two outstanding creations are part of collections such as the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and the Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/Basel.
While Picasso depicts Dora Maar as a desperately weeping woman in his alarming portrait “La femme qui pleure” (The Weeping Woman), as he saw his sensitive lover who had been painfully disappointed by him many times, he shows us Dora Maar in all her sensuality and eroticism in “La femme au tambourin” (The Woman with the Tambourine). She is a bacchante or maenad, a woman who displays her erotic charms openly, who, according to ancient mythology, is a dancing and music-making companion at a feast centered around Bacchus, the God of festivity and ecstasy. Besides Pan and the Minotaur, it is Bacchus, among others, whom the love-addicted artist found to be his ancient alter ego, which is why we become intimate witnesses to the intoxicating and captivating love dance between Picasso and Dora Maar in “La femme au tambourin.” It is the big eyes and lips, the cascading hair, the breasts, and the round buttocks that Picasso masterfully depicts against the deep black aquatint background. The motif of movement is formally reminiscent of Umberto Boccioni's famous futuristic bronze “Forme uniche della continuità nello spazio” (1913, Museum of Modern Art, New York). “La femme au tambourin” is a striking example of Picasso’s avant-garde portrayal of femininity and eroticism. He does not show us the suffering lover, as Dora Maar was to go down in art history, but rather the captivating, self-confident, rapturous seductress. [JS]



125001210
Pablo Picasso
La femme au tambourin, 1939.
Etching and aquatint and scraper
Estimate:
€ 450,000 - 650,000

 
$ 522,000 - 754,000

Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.

 


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