Still Life with Aniseed Brandy Bottle by Pablo Picasso – Canvas Giclée Print

$99.00$159.00

The high-resolution replica revisits the masterpiece “Still Life with Aniseed Brandy Bottle” painted 1909 by Pablo Picasso. As one of the Spanish artist’s seminal pieces of work, it is part of the masterpiece series at Pigment Pool. Picasso created the picture during the early years of the cubist art movement called Analytical Cubism (1908 – 1912), characterised by overlapping planes and the fragmentary appearance of multiple viewpoints.

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Pablo PicassoAnalytical Cubism: Today, Picasso is seen as one of the most versatile artists in history. He passed through different stages of producing artwork with clearly discernible approaches in painting. Throughout the years, people have been both scandalized and intrigued by his work, even more so since he challenged and dismantled the rules of art multiple times, transcending existing conventions and paving the way to modernism. While Impressionists had challenged the narrative approach to painting focusing on the moment of perception, Picasso marked another historical process: Where once message and image, content and form had to harmonize, Picasso saw form as solitary content existent on its own and as such further moving towards abstraction. The picture “Still Life with Aniseed Brandy Bottle” (also called “Still Life with Liqueur Bottle” and “Still Life with a Bottle of Rum”) exemplifies the progression.

Where is the picture “Still Life with Aniseed Brandy Bottle today?

The original picture of “Still Life with Aniseed Brandy Bottle” is part of the permanent collection at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City.

What’s in it?

A criss-cross of lines and overlapping colour zones in shades of blue-green and orange-yellow is the first impression when looking at “Still Life with Aniseed Brandy Bottle”. Only at second glance, the central subject of this still life emerges towards the viewer: a bottle of aniseed brandy, placed in the middle of the picture. Apparently, the painting fulfils the main requirements of a still life: It depicts the outer appearance of inanimate subject matter, here with the commonplace man-made object of a glass bottle. Yet the artist is displaying the skill of playing with the natural image. Lines are no longer restricted to defining the available form and are even continued at random. So do the colours in this cubist still life: Lighter and darker shades seem to partially disregard the shape of the bottle, and instead are obeying the rules of the overall composition. The object is dissected or “analysed”. The translucent, multifaceted cut-glass surface offered Picasso a starting point for deconstruction, the bottle itself however loses its mimetic character and can be seen detached from what is claims to represent.

What’s the context?

Pablo Picasso – periods: In the early 20th century, Picasso centred his artistic experiments on the genre of still life, exploring the processes of perception and their relationship to the mechanics of representation. The artist drew and painted myriad arrangements of objects including glasses, bottles, guitars, and fruit.
In preceding art periods, namely Picasso’s Blue Period (1901–1904), the Rose Period (1904–1906), and the African-influenced Period (1907–1909), the represented objects still played a major role in the respective compositions. The transition to Analytical Cubism was created by his painting Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (1907), in which he abandoned all known form and representation of traditional art, using distortion and simplifying the female body to geometric forms. In his cubist still lives Picasso rendered with an artistic language of fragmented, flattened planes portrayed from multiple viewpoints.

Chatter and Prattle

Pablo Picasso – Facts:

  • The reference object of the picture, a glass bottle of alcohol, appears in many of Picasso’s still lives and portraits such as “The Absinthe Drinker” (sold 2010 for 51,2 million USD!).
  • Picasso’s affinity for painting scenes with alcohol and its containers is not coincidental. Many art historians have labelled him as an alcoholic. However, alcohol would never stop him from performing as an outstanding artist.
  • The artist’s final words have been recorded to be “Drink to me, drink to my health. You know I can’t drink anymore.” These words soon became legendary: In 1973, the year of his death, Paul McCartney used them in a song.

 

Recommended Readings:

This article may contain compensated links. Please read Disclaimer for more info. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Marilyn McCully et al. (2019): Picasso: Blue and Rose Periods

Victoria Charles (2019): Pablo Picasso Masterwoks

Roland Doschka et al. (2000): Pablo Picasso: Metamorphoses of the Human Form : Graphic Works, 1895-1972

Francoise Gilot et al. (2020): Life with Picasso

Christopher Lloyd (2018): Picasso and the Art of Drawing

Size

20 x 25 cm, 28 x 36 cm, 40 x 50 cm, 50 x 63 cm, 60 x 75 cm, 75 x 88 cm

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