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Couple Faisant l'Amour
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Couple Making Love
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| Date: |
1933 |
| Medium: |
Etching, grattoir, and drypoint on copper |
| Dimensions: |
Print 198 x 279mm, 7 7/8 x 11"; Sheet 340 x 448mm, 13.4 x
17.6" |
| Signature: |
Signed "Picasso" in pencil, lower right. (By Petiet's hand, in
the lower left corner, 350 is written in pencil.) |
| References: |
Suite Vollard 32; Bloch 202; Baer 378
IXBd (the ninth and final state) |
| Edition: |
From the edition of 260 on Montval paper printed by Lacouriere
in 1939 before the cancellation of the plate. (There was also an
edition
of 50 on wider-margined paper that same year.) |
| Paper: |
Montval laid; deckled edges on right and left; untrimmed |
| Watermark: |
Vollard |
| Impression: |
Very fine |
| Condition: |
Flawless, framed |
| Price: |
Upon request |
This complex intaglio print is one of several masterful Vollard
Suite prints which have been variably termed as “Couple
Making Love"
by Geiser and Baer, “Le Viol” (“The Rape”)
by Bloch, and “The Battle of Love” by Bolliger.
The key to interpreting this sub-series is provided by Lisa
Florman in her wonderful book, Myth and Metamorphosis: Picasso’s
Classical Prints of the 1930’s,
in the form of many insights about the interconnectedness of
the various plates
of the Vollard Suite, which she likens to “the intricate
mesh of a spider’s web”. Regarding this subgroup
of prints, she writes:
At first glance, those plates [of the “Battle
of Love”]
would seem to have nothing in common with the “Sculptor’s
Studio.” Each of the five “Battle” images
depicts a couple in the throes of sexual passion: bodies entangled,
mouths
open—in all, a far cry from the visible quiescence of the “Studio” scenes.
But this difference between the two series is not merely difference;
it is direct opposition, and it operates on a number of levels.
Whereas figures in the “Sculptor’s Studio” are
characterized by a certain air of detachment, those in the “Battle
of Love” seem anything but detached. By the same token,
where vision dominates relations within the “Studio”,
the “Lovers” are pressed too close for sight; they
shut their eyes tightly or stare without seeing. Although these
features are plainly there in the prints, they are brought to
the fore only through a comparison of the two series. Those series
are, in effect, polar complements, mutually defining each other
in their opposition. Confirmation is to be had from plate 28…[Le
Viol sous la Fenetre, Bloch 183], the earliest of the Suite’s
five “Battle” scenes. In the upper left-hand corner
of that image, a window sill and vase of flowers—much as
appear throughout the “Studio” series...—are
clearly visible. Their inclusion in this plate links the “Battle” with
the sculptor’s studio, and thus its frenzied lovers with
the studio’s own, more subdued occupants.
As Florman suggests, it is unlikely that Picasso intended to
portray the model as an unwilling accomplice to the embrace.
For Picasso, the natural progression of sculptor and model from
the studio to the bedroom seems much closer to what he must have
had in mind.
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