
Pablo Picasso
Spanish, 1881 - 1973
Family of Saltimbanques, 1905
oil on canvas, 212.8 x 229.6 cm (83 3/4 x 90 3/8 in.)
Chester Dale Collection
1963.10.190
From the Tour:
Selections from the 20th-Century Collections
From late 1904
to the beginning of 1906, Picasso's work centered on a single theme: the
saltimbanque, or itinerant circus performer. The theme of the
circus and the circus performer had a long tradition in art and in
literature, and had become especially prominent in French art of the
late nineteenth century. A more immediate inspiration for Picasso came
from performances of the Cirque Médrano, a circus that the artist
attended frequently near his residence and studio in Montmartre.
Circus
performers were regarded as social outsiders, poor but independent. As
such, they provided a telling symbol for the alienation of avant-garde
artists such as Picasso. Indeed, it has been suggested that the
Family of Saltimbanques serves as an autobiographical statement, a
covert group portrait of Picasso and his circle.
Picasso
reworked the Family of Saltimbanques several times, adding
figures and altering the composition. The figures occupy a desolate
landscape and although Picasso has knit them together in a carefully
balanced composition, each figure is psychologically isolated from the
others, and from the viewer. In his rose, or circus period, Picasso
moved away from the extreme pathos of his earlier blue period, but in
the Family of Saltimbanques, the masterpiece of the circus
period, a mood of introspection and sad contemplation prevails.
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