AllInfo

Picasso's “Buste de Femme” under the hammer

For the first time in 25 years, a late work by Pablo Picasso will be auctioned in Germany. The estimated value is at least 1.5 million euros. The painting shows the artist's second wife.

Late work in the Cubist style of Pablo Picasso

Two years before his death, Pablo Picasso created the painting “Buste de femme” (Bust of a Woman) in 1971. Art historians recognize the picture as Picasso's second wife, Jacqueline Roque. The Spaniard met the Frenchwoman, who was born in 1927, in 1953. She was more than forty years his junior. The two married after his first wife, Olga Khokhlova, passed away. None of his numerous lovers or wives portrayed Picasso as often as the little French woman with dark, thick hair and the classic Mediterranean face.

None of her many predecessors dedicated her existence so much to the artist and eccentric who lived in France from 1904. Jacqueline Roque lived with him and for him. She was at his service almost continuously until his death on April 8, 1973. When he died, she barely managed to survive. Emaciated and wracked with depression, Jacqueline Rocque ended her life 13 years after the death of the idolized artist she had called her “sun”. Jacqueline Roque was 59 years old at the time of her suicide.

“Buste de Femmes” comes from Rocque's estate

The painting comes from her estate and will go under the hammer on June 5 from a German private collection at Cologne's Van Ham auction house. The estimated value is 1.5 to 2.5 million euros. That seems pretty cheap compared to the record price of 179.4 million dollars (around 160 million euros) for the work “The Women of Algiers”. But that is mainly due to the fact that Picasso's late work is generally rated less highly on the art market.

The painting “Buste de Femme” was also presented in Berlin, Munich and Hamburg as a PR measure. According to the auction house Van Ham, it is the first time in at least 25 years that a major painting by Picasso has been auctioned in Germany.

Picasso is using his power

Museums around the world are celebrating Pablo Picasso this year on the 50th anniversary of his death. As part of the exhibitions and celebrations, the relationship between the native Spaniard and his wives and countless lovers was increasingly brought into focus. Only now – in the wake of #MeToo and a new wave of self-assertion – is it becoming apparent how well Picasso knew how to exploit his power and influence. 

On Picasso's footsteps through Málaga

He himself made no secret of it. As he himself once said, he divided women into goddesses and doormats. Almost all went through this metamorphosis. But only in the anniversary year are book publications and exhibitions drawing attention to it. Some art connoisseurs already see Pablo Picasso's throne shaking.


Exit mobile version