Le petit picador jaune | |
---|---|
English: The little yellow bullfighter | |
Artist | Pablo Picasso |
Year | 1889 |
Medium | oil paint on wood |
Dimensions | 24 x 19 cm |
Le petit picador jaune (English: The little yellow bullfighter) is an oil on wood painting by the Spanish artist Pablo Picasso, which he created in 1889 at the age of eight. It is considered to be the earliest known surviving work by the artist. The painting is a colourful representation of a Spanish bullfight, a subject which Picasso repeatedly returned to throughout his career. [1]
Picasso began to develop his artistic skills from an early age. His first art teacher was his father, José Ruiz y Blasco, whose nickname was "Pepe". He worked as a teacher at the Malaga School of Fine Arts and also as curator at the city's municipal museum. Picasso's father had great influence on his son, particularly in relation to his developing artistic skills. Picasso would watch his father paint and they often visited the museum together. [2] Picasso’s early artistic skills are evident in this painting, which was created before he had received any formal art training. Picasso would later state, “I never drew like a child. When I was 12, I drew like Raphael”. [3] When Picasso’s training as an artist began, he was put to work on interior decorative painting, where he painted pigeons’ legs. Picasso’s father soon noticed his son’s talent and decided to enrol him in The Barcelona Academy of Art. There the now thirteen-year-old Picasso created a drawing for the entrance exam within the course of a day, a task that would normally take an entire month. By 1894, Picasso had developed his skills and had begun his career as an artist. [4] By this point, he had already been inspired by the work of other Spanish masters, like Diego Velázquez and Francisco Goya. However, he decided to relocate to Paris after making his first trip in 1900 and would spend most of his adult life there. [5]
Le petit picador jaune is considered to be the earliest painting by Picasso, having been painted at the tender age of eight years. [6] The painting depicts a bullfight, an activity which Picasso was already attending at age seven. [7] The young Picasso painted the image after attending a bullfight in Malaga’s La Malagueta bullring in 1889. [8]
The painting is small in size, measuring just 24 cm x 19 cm. The composition is of a bullfighter on horseback, dressed in bright yellow, who is the focus of the scene, with three spectators standing outside the bullring. The image displays an element of playfulness and comic caricature in its representation of the subject. [9]
Le petit picador jaune contains elements that influenced the artist in childhood and would continue to preoccupy him throughout his adult artistic career. The subject matter of bulls and bullfighting is a prominent aspect of Picasso’s Spanish heritage, and a theme that Picasso returned to on repeated occasions in his work. [10] Picasso maintained a fascination for bullfighting and would regularly visit the arenas in the South of France later in life. The violence that the young Picasso would have witnessed at the bullring in childhood was a recurring element of his work, not least of all in his 1937 painting Guernica , in which the presence of a bull has been interpreted as a symbol of death. [11] In Le petit picador jaune, the artist’s primary motive was to depict the spectacle of the event and the drama of the scene, yet in his later adult works, the bull would be used to convey other themes, such as eroticism and emotion, which were influenced by biographical events. [12]
Another recurring motif in this painting is the presence of a horse, a subject which appears time and again throughout Picasso’s work right through to his later years in the 1960s, including Guernica. In Picasso’s art, the horse represented many meanings, including being both a noble and grotesque symbol. Horses can be seen depicted in many of his subsequent works, including Boy Leading a Horse (1906), Naked Horseman (1919), The Rape (1920), and Bullfight (1934). [8]
Although Picasso left Madrid to start a new life in Paris, he never forgot his Spanish heritage. His experiences of watching the bullfights in Madrid at an early age made a lasting impression on him and he maintained a life-long obsession with bullfighting. The character of the matador was a subject that he continually returned to and was an important symbol of his Spanish heritage. For Picasso, the bullfight embodied a public display of violence, bravery and skill. Picasso was particularly attracted to the subject due to its powerful contradictions of grace and brutality, entertainment and tragedy, and life and death. In A Picasso Bestiary, Neil Cox and Deborah Povey remarked on the influence of bullfighting on the work of Picasso. "The bullfight was, of course, immensely important to Picasso. The play of domination and subjugation, grandeur and pathos which characterises his pictures of bulls and their Cretan cousin the Minotaur, is essentially a product of that almost religious intensity of the rituals of the ring." [13]
Picasso's friend and biographer, John Richardson, who attended the bullring with Picasso, said that the crowds at the bullfights were "screaming and clapping and cheering and Picasso just sat there, absolutely still, not making any sound but just taking it all in. Occasionally he would make a remark." He also said of the painting, "It is amazing to see all what comes out of that early image. We haven’t got anything else from that date, it was something he always hung on to. It is fascinating to see what came out of it." [14]
Helen Newman, Global Co-Head of Sotheby’s Impressionist & Modern Art Department & Chairman of Sotheby’s Europe, commented on Picasso's depictions of the bullfight, "Through the subject of the bullfight, Picasso explores the theme of life and death, creation and destruction, earth and sun, casting himself at the centre stage of the spectacle." [15]
In 2017, the painting was featured in the exhibition Picasso: Minotaurs and Matadors at the Gagosian Gallery in London. [16]
A bullfighter is a performer in the activity of bullfighting. Torero or toureiro, both from Latin taurarius, are the Spanish and Portuguese words for bullfighter, and describe all the performers in the activity of bullfighting as practised in Spain, Portugal, Mexico, Peru, France, Colombia, Ecuador, Venezuela and other countries influenced by Portuguese and Spanish culture. The main performer and leader of the entourage in a bullfight, and who finally kills the bull, is addressed as maestro (master), or with the formal title matador de toros. The other bullfighters in the entourage are called subalternos and their suits are embroidered in silver as opposed to the matador's gold. They include the picadores, rejoneadores, and banderilleros.
Guernica is a large 1937 oil painting by Spanish artist Pablo Picasso. It is one of his best-known works, regarded by many art critics as the most moving and powerful anti-war painting in history. It is exhibited in the Museo Reina Sofía in Madrid.
Francisco Romero (1700–1763) was a significant Spanish matador. He reputedly introduced the famous red cape (muleta) into bullfighting in around 1726.
Dora Maar au Chat is an oil-on-canvas painting by Pablo Picasso. It was painted in 1941 and depicts Dora Maar, the artist's lover, seated on a chair with a small cat perched on her shoulders. The painting is listed as one of the most expensive paintings, after achieving a price of $95 million at Sotheby's on 3 May 2006. It is currently the sixth-highest-selling painting by Picasso.
A picador is one of the pair of horse-mounted bullfighters in a Spanish-style bullfight that jab the bull with a lance. They perform in the tercio de varas, which is the first of the three stages in a stylized bullfight.
El Fandi is statistically one of the most skilled matadors in the world. Currently, he is ranked number one among all bullfighters in Spain.
Spanish-style bullfighting is a type of bullfighting that is practiced in several Spanish-speaking countries: Spain, Mexico, Ecuador, Venezuela, Peru, as well as in parts of southern France and Portugal. In Colombia it has been outlawed but is being phased out with a full ban coming in effect in 2027. This style of bullfighting involves a physical contest with humans attempting to publicly subdue, immobilize, or kill a bull. The most common bull used is the Spanish Fighting Bull, a type of cattle native to the Iberian Peninsula. This style of bullfighting is seen to be both a sport and performance art. The red colour of the cape is a matter of tradition – bulls are color blind. They attack moving objects; the brightly-colored cape is used to mask blood stains.
Antonio Cayetano Rivera Ordóñez is a Spanish torero or 'bullfighter'.
Minotauromachy is a 19.5 by 27.4” etching and engraving created by Spanish artist Pablo Picasso in Paris in 1935. The etching and resulting prints, literally entitled Minotaur Battle, feature many compositional aspects and themes seen often in Picasso’s art throughout the 1930s. These include the Minotaur, an unconscious or dying female matador on an injured horse, a young girl holding a candle and flowers, a man scaling a ladder, and two women watching with doves from a window. Created during a time of personal turmoil within which Picasso created little artwork, Minotauromachy stands out as a seminal and striking piece with no shortage of artistic interpretations.
Bullfighting is a physical contest that involves a bullfighter attempting to subdue, immobilize, or kill a bull, usually according to a set of rules, guidelines, or cultural expectations.
Child with a Dove, also described as Child Holding a Dove, Child with a Pigeon is an oil-on-canvas painting by the Spanish artist Pablo Picasso, which he created in 1901 at the start of his Blue Period. The painting is a depiction of a young girl in a white dress holding a white dove, and represents an important transitional moment in the artist’s career. It was on public display at the National Gallery in London, England for nearly four decades before its private sale in 2012, when it achieved a price of £50 million.
La Gommeuse is a 1901 oil-on-canvas painting by the Spanish artist Pablo Picasso. It dates from his Blue Period and is noted for its caricature of Picasso's friend Pere Mañach painted on the reverse. Gommeuse was sexually charged slang of the time for café-concert singers and their songs. It was offered for sale ex the William I. Koch collection at a Sotheby's, New York, auction on 5 November 2015. The painting realized $67.5 million at the sale, a record for a Blue Period Picasso, placing the painting among the most expensive ever sold.
Bullfight is an 1824 oil painting by Goya owned since 1992 by the J. Paul Getty Museum. When the museum bought the painting at auction in 1992, it shattered the artist's previous auction record. This piece shows Goya’s favorite form of entertainment: the controversial contest of bullfighting.
Toros Y Toreros is a 1961 book of bullfighting drawings by Pablo Picasso with text by bullfighter Luis Miguel Dominguin and an essay by Georges Boudaille. The title of the book is handwritten by Picasso.
Mademoiselle V. in the Costume of an Espada is an 1862 oil-on-canvas painting by French artist Édouard Manet. The painting is in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, having been acquired in 1929. Manet exhibited the painting at the 1863 Salon des Refusés alongside Jeune Homme en costume de majo and Le Déjeuner sur l'herbe. It is often cited as an example of Manet's work being influenced by Spanish art.
Bullfight – Death of the Bull is an oil on canvas painting by Édouard Manet, executed c. 1865. It is now in the Art Institute of Chicago.
Ricardo Chibanga was a Mozambican bullfighter and the first Bantu African bullfighter.
The Bulls of Bordeaux is a series of four lithographs featuring scenes of bullfighting by the Spanish painter and printmaker Francisco Goya, produced in 1825 during his exile in France. Unlike the series La Tauromaquia which dealt with the performers in bullfighting, The Bulls of Bordeaux deals with bullfighting as a popular spectacle.
José Dámaso Rodríguez y Rodríguez, known as Pepete, was a Spanish bullfighter in the mid-19th century. He was the first notable matador known by this nickname.
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