Signed original prints, drawings, paintings, and sculptures for sale
fine art home > BUY ORIGINALS > PABLO PICASSO > Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture

Pablo Picasso, Still Life, 1952


Signed Pablo Picasso, Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture, Still Life, 1952

Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952

Place your cursor over the thumbnails below to view the full-size image:

Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952 (thumbnail 1) Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952 (thumbnail 2) Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952 (thumbnail 3)

Click each room to better visualize its scale and beauty in different contexts.:



Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952 (thumbnail room-view)
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952 (thumbnail room-view)
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952 (thumbnail room-view)
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952 (thumbnail room-view)
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952 (thumbnail room-view)
Artist: Picasso, Pablo (1881 - 1973)
Title: Still Life, 1952
Medium:
Unique Color Variant Madoura Ceramic Square Dish with black and brown glaze
Image Size: DIMENSIONS: 13 in x 13 in (33 cm x 33 cm)
Framed Size: 31 1/4 in x 31 1/4 in (79.6 cm x 79.6 cm)
Signed: This work is stamped on the reverse with the 'MADOURA PLEIN FEU' and 'EMPREINTE ORIGINALE DE PICASSO' stamps; 'MADE IN FRANCE' hand applied in yellow paint on verso. Dated in the clay in the lower right in reverse, '22.12.52.'
Edition: Unique
Condition: This work is in excellent condition.
Gallery Price 
$8,000
Item# 2987
Questions? Submit Best Offer Purchase Now

This shimmering piece is a unique color variant, a brilliant hue of brown-black with a magnificent glossy surface that transforms in color, depending on the effects of light and shadow. While this work itself is a ceramic dish, Picasso creates a border that appears as a serving platter, as if this spoon and cup were being served to us on a plate.


Read more about our pricing
Gallery Price: This is a common gallery retail price
Read more about our pricing
 

Request Invitation:

We have openings for a few new members each day. Members receive exclusive offers on our entire inventory.

Historical Description:
This unique piece is a brilliant hue of brown-black with a magnificent glossy surface that transforms in color, depending on the effects of light and shadow. A spoon rests in a translucent cup filled halfway with liquid while joyful sun-like figures dot the piece, adding a sense of animation to the still life scene. While this work itself is a ceramic dish, Picasso creates a border that appears as a serving platter, as if this spoon and cup were being served to the viewer on a plate; he creates the illusion of a plate within a plate, toying with the viewer's visual perception and adding a playful element to this piece.

Conceived in 1952, this work is a variant and unique in terms of color. This work is stamped on the reverse with the 'MADOURA PLEIN FEU' and 'EMPREINTE ORIGINALE DE PICASSO' stamps; 'MADE IN FRANCE' hand applied in yellow paint on verso. This work is dated in the clay in the lower right in reverse, '22.12.52.'

Illustrated in:
1) Bloch, Georges. Pablo Picasso: Volume III Catalogue of the Printed Ceramics 1949-1971. Switzerland: Editions Kornfeld et Klipstein, 1972. Other variants of this piece listed and illustrated as catalogue raisonné..
2) Ramié, A. (1988) Picasso Catalogue of the edited ceramic works 1947-1971.
3) Ramie, Georges. Picasso's Ceramics. New York: The Viking Press, 1976. Another variant of this piece listed and illustrated as catalogue.

About the Framing:
Museum-grade conservation framed in a complementary moulding with silk mats and a window on the verso displaying the 'Madoura Plein Feu' and 'Empreinte Originale de Picasso' stamps.

Style: Cubism, Blue Period, Rose Period, 20th Century Spanish Modern Master, Madoura ceramics of Vallauris, Vollard
 

About Us: Masterworks Fine Art strives to be the best source of fine art for our clients and collectors all over the world. We believe the most direct way to accomplish this is by establishing a lifetime of personal and professional relationships with our clients. More About Us »

Do you own a similar Picasso to sell? We offer free evaluations.

Biography of Pablo Picasso

Pablo PicassoPablo Picasso (1881 - 1973)

"Yet Cubism and Modern art weren't either scientific or intellectual; they were visual and came from the eye and mind of one of the greatest geniuses in art history. Pablo Picasso, born in Spain, was a child prodigy who was recognized as such by his art-teacher father, who ably led him along. The small Museo de Picasso in Barcelona is devoted primarily to his early works, which include strikingly realistic renderings of casts of ancient sculpture.

"He was a rebel from the start and, as a teenager, began to frequent the Barcelona cafes where intellectuals gathered. He soon went to Paris, the capital of art, and soaked up the works of Manet, Gustave Courbet, and Toulouse-Lautrec, whose sketchy style impressed him greatly. Then it was back to Spain, a return to France, and again back to Spain - all in the years 1899 to 1904.

"Before he struck upon Cubism, Picasso went through a prodigious number of styles - realism, caricature, the Blue Period, and the Rose Period. The Blue Period dates from 1901 to 1904 and is characterized by a predominantly blue palette and subjects focusing on outcasts, beggars, and prostitutes. This was when he also produced his first sculptures. The most poignant work of the style is in Cleveland's Museum of Art, La Vie (1903), which was created in memory of a great childhood friend, the Spanish poet Casagemas, who had committed suicide. The painting started as a self-portrait, but Picasso's features became those of his lost friend. The composition is stilted, the space compressed, the gestures stiff, and the tones predominantly blue. Another outstanding Blue Period work, of 1903, is in the Metropolitan, The Blind Man's Meal. Yet another example, perhaps the most lyrical and mysterious ever, is in the Toledo Museum of Art, the haunting Woman with a Crow (1903).

"The Rose Period began around 1904 when Picasso's palette brightened, the paintings dominated by pinks and beiges, light blues, and roses. His subjects are saltimbanques (circus people), harlequins, and clowns, all of whom seem to be mute and strangely inactive. One of the premier works of this period is in Washington, D.C., the National Gallery's large and extremely beautiful Family of Saltimbanques dating to 1905, which portrays a group of circus workers who appear alienated and incapable of communicating with each other, set in a one-dimensional space.

"In 1905, Picasso went briefly to Holland, and on his return to Paris, his works took on a classical aura with large male and fernale figures seen frontally or in distinct profile, almost like early Greek art. One of the best of these of 1906 is in the Albright-Knox Gallery in Buffalo, NY, La Toilette. Several pieces in this new style were purchased by Gertrude (the art patron and writer) and her brother, Leo Stein.

Picasso enjoyed creating his art on many media. From paintings to etchings to ceramics, all of his works are a testament to his skills. There are even Picasso prints that are worth more than unique original works.

The artistic periods of Pablo Picasso

Historical Pablo Picasso exhibitions

Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952
Picasso Unique Ceramic Madoura Sculpture Signed, Still Life, 1952