PICASSO loved paper and he never threw a scrap of it away, firmly believing that ‘one is what one keeps’.
A visit to the massive archives of the Musée Picasso in a suburb of Paris, from which about 80% of the loans to this exhibition came, reveals exactly how extensive his paper collection was. Not only did he keep thousands of sketches and graphic works, he also hoarded all manner of paper ephemera, including bus tickets, letters, newsprint, pieces of wallpaper and bottle labels. Many of these fragments made surprising reappearances in his art: magazine photographs were doctored with comic figures, slivers of ugly wallpaper or pages from newspapers were incorporated into collages; a paper napkin was torn to resemble his lover Dora Maar’s beloved pet dog after it died.
This story is from the February 05, 2020 edition of Country Life UK.
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This story is from the February 05, 2020 edition of Country Life UK.
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