1. Kunstmuseum Basel will Present major Pablo Picasso: Prints Exhibition

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    artwork: Pablo Picasso - L’Egyptienne (or, more formally, Torse de femme) 

    Basel, Switzerland - Pablo Picasso applied himself with great intensity to the specific possibilities of print techniques. From woodcuts and etchings to lithographs and linoleum cuts, he employed every known printing method with stupendous ease and mastery, developing complex mixed techniques and experimenting with polychrome prints. He created his first etching, Le Repas frugal, in 1904. An ambitious piece, it marked the beginning of a huge oeuvre of over 2000 printed works. On exhibition at Kunstmuseum Basel from 31 January through 24 May, 2009.

    As a printmaker, Picasso follows in the tradition of Dürer, Rembrandt, and Goya. In more recent techniques such as the linoleum cut, he set entirely new standards.

    artwork: Pablo Picasso - Le Repas frugal, 1904The collection of the Kupferstichkabinett in Basel, including more than 150 sheets, is much more than a supplement to the outstanding ensemble of Picasso’s paintings in the Kunst¬museum. Thanks to its breadth, it enables an enhanced engagement with the graphic aspect of the artist’s highly diverse complete works. Half of these prints originate from the collection of the important Swiss collector Georges Bloch (1900-1983), Picasso’s friend, who produced a four-volume catalogue of his prints. In 1972 and 1982, Bloch donated a total of 512 sheets to the Gottfried-Keller Stiftung, which have been divided among several Swiss museums.

    The exhibition shows a representative selection of approximately 90 prints from all phases of Picasso’s career, from the Blue Period through Cubism to the late prints from around 1970. These include fantastic works such as the color linoleum print L’Homme à la fraise and etchings from the famous Suite Vollard. The spectrum of subjects ranges from the saltim¬banques and the representations of the artist and his model to the portraits, offering a fascinating insight into Picasso’s graphic works.

    The Kunstmuseum Basel possesses the worlds largest collection of works by the Holbein family. Further examples of Renaissance art include major pieces by such masters as Konrad Witz, Martin Schongauer, Lucas Cranach the Elder and Mathias Grünewald. Most of these early treasures originally belonged to the collection of a Basel lawyer, Basilius Amerbach. Purchased by the city in 1661, they formed the core of the worlds first public municipal museum.

    Paintings by Basel-born Arnold Böcklin feature among the 19th-century highlights. In the field of 20th-century art, the accent is on Cubism (Picasso, Braque, Léger), German Expressionism, Abstract Expressionism and American art since 1950. Contemporary art is exhibited at the Museum für Gegenwartskunst (Museum of Contemporary Art). Visit : http://www.kunstmuseumbasel.ch/


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