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JUNE 4–AUGUST 27, 2017


THE WEEPING WOMAN


The Weeping Woman, I

Pablo Picasso
Spanish, 1881–1973
The Weeping Woman, I
1937
Drypoint, aquatint, etching, and scraper on paper
Private Collection
© 2017 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York


Soon after Marie-Thérèse Walter gave birth to their daughter Maya, and while still married to but separated from Olga Khokhlova, Picasso began a relationship with the Surrealist photographer Dora Maar. As was his pattern, this new muse began to appear frequently in his work, including in the striking painting Portrait of Dora Maar (1937). The physiological elements in the painting, including sharp fingernails and coiffed black hair, reappear in one of Picasso’s most powerful graphic works, The Weeping Woman, I. A ferocious image of grief, at once compelling and frightening, the print is one of the largest created in the wake of his iconic painting Guernica (1937) in which a similar tormented figure appeared. Guernica expresses the horrors of war, its title referring to the undefended town in the Basque region of northern Spain, which was bombed by General Francisco Franco’s fascist troops. After completing Guernica, Picasso undertook a series of drawings, paintings, and prints depicting the subject of the “weeping woman.” In the large-scale print, as in the two smaller manifestations of the subject—The Weeping Woman, III and The Weeping Woman, IV—the figure is distorted in a silent shriek of pain. The woman, who resembles Dora Maar, raises a scissor-like hand to wipe away the spiked tears that incise the overlapping planes of her contorted face.


A fully illustrated catalogue accompanies the exhibition, with an essay by Marilyn McCully on the role of printmakers in Picasso’s artistic process, as well as a new understanding of the importance Picasso’s muses played in the artist’s life by Jay A. Clarke. The catalogue is published by the Clark and distributed by Yale University Press. Call the Museum Store at 413 458 0520 to order.


Picasso logo from Musee Picasso Paris