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Tete de Chevre dans la Nuit Étoilé
Goat's Head on a Starry Night

Date: 1952
Medium: Ceramic
Dimensions: 414 x 408 x 51mm, 16 1/4 x 16 1/16 x 2 1/8"
References: A. Ramié 151
Edition: One of 100 impressions of this original print in clay, although this particular color variant depicting the goat on a starry night is apparently very rare; the following inscription is engraved on the back: "Madoura Plein Feu; Empreinte Originale de Picasso"
Impression: Very fine impression in relief with densely, brightly glazed colors
Condition: Flawless
Price: POR


It may not correspond to the Chinese calendar, but for Picasso, 1952 was the year of the goat. Two years earlier, he had drawn a few goat’s skulls, painted a wonderful reclining goat (entitled, simply, Goat, PP50-002) which now rests at the Musée Picasso, and also fashioned his charming, large bronze sculpture, the She-Goat, of which there are two casts, one at the Musée Picasso Paris and the other at the MOMA. But in 1952, Picasso’s pet Esmeralda must have caught his eye in full force, because he created a number of astounding portraits of her in several media that year, including a number of paintings, a few incredible prints (a lovely but tiny etching, Bloch 697, serves more or less as a reprise of the bronze, and two wonderful but somewhat macabre aquatints of a post mortem goat head, Bloch 691 and 696), and some ceramics, including this stunning masterpiece.

Let’s give a name to the artistic style of this ceramic: Geometric. Since the time of Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, in which Picasso carved space as if with a knife, with a result more akin to a misshapen geode than any habitable room we’ve ever entered, numerous novel iterations of this signature style formed the substrate of many of his best works. Though the term Cubist is often applied to these instances, I rather think it is misapplied. In my opinion, the term Cubism is best left to the work that followed hot on the heels of Les Demoiselles and ended with Synthetic Cubism in the ‘teens. The fragmentation of design in that oeuvre is quite different than the many new styles that followed it, though it certainly could be said that the later styles borrowed from it and built upon it.

This goat ceramic, and the closely related painting of the same year, Crâne de Chèvre, Bouteille et Bougie (at the Tate Modern) are exemplars of the Geometric style. Picasso carved the design of this ceramic in wet clay. He then had the clay fired, and the hardened designed served as a mold for the finished product. Thus, the plate shows the design of the goat in relief, raised lines in a pattern typical of the Geometric style. (Geometrism?) The plates were then painted and glazed variously, and the two finest examples by far, neither of which are included in the Ramie catalogue raisonné, are exhibited here. Descriptively, one could call them the black-and-white goat on a partly cloudy day, and the black goat on a starry night.

Of all of the several variants of this editioned ceramic (they vary in the way they were painted and in the extent to which they were glazed), the goat in the starry night shows off Picasso’s geometric carving the best, because colored paint does not distract from the geometric relief, and the matt glaze of the goat accentuates the relief. This variant could be aptly subtitled "Anatomy of a Goat", as Picasso's triangles and ellipses create a surreal, pseudo-anatomic depiction of the angles of a lovely goat's profile.  The starry night variant also appears to be a very rare—a couple of other experts whom I have consulted have also never seen it elsewhere, apart from one sighting in the distant past at the Picasso Museum in Antibes.

The black-and-white goat variant is the next best at accentuating the relief pattern and, because of its lovely coloration—a partly white face and white clouds on a light bluish-gray sky—has a lighter, happier feel. All these goats, however, bear a distinct smile, which reliably evokes a corresponding one in the viewer.

We’ve named this goat Esmeralda, after Picasso’s eponymous pet. Due to Esmeralda’s happy face, the brilliant Geometrism with which Picasso carved her, the lovely ways in which she has been painted and glazed, and her substantial, life-like size—this plate is pleasingly massive—this is the best of Picasso’s editioned ceramics, at least in my wife’s and my opinion (and we don’t always agree!). We also hold the five female portraits transferred from linoleum cuts to clay (especially the large one, Ramie number 518, but also Ramie 520-523), at the same level of achievement, but take the comparison no further, since goats and women are like apples and oranges.

 

 


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Ledor Fine Art
Berkeley, CA; USA
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