Barnes Foundation Announces New Exhibition
Picasso: The Great War, Experimentation And Change Opens Feb. 21
Unlike other members of the Parisian avant-garde, Picasso never directly addressed World War I as a subject in his art. Instead, he began experimenting with naturalistic representation, turning out classical figure drawings that outraged many of his avant-garde colleagues. This was quite a shift from the radical cubist approach he had been developing since 1907. Picasso did not give up cubism, however. Instead, he shuttled back and forth between two different styles for over a decade, breaking forms apart and making them whole again. The exhibition looks closely at the strange ambivalence characterizing Picassos wartime production, exploring it in connection with changes to his personal life, with his misgivings about cubism, and with the political meanings ascribed to cubism during the war.
The exhibition is curated by Simonetta Fraquelli, an independent curator and specialist in early 20th-century Europan art. The managing curator at the Barnes is Martha Lucy. The exhibition will travel to the Columbus Museum of Art in June 2016.
To learn more, visit www.barnesfoundation.org.