PICASSO, NAUMAN and CALDER, THREE GREAT ARTISTS FOR 2019 AT MUSEO PICASSO MÁLAGA

23/11/2018

Museo Picasso Málaga has scheduled three first-time exhibitions for 2019 that examine the work of three key artists: Pablo Picasso, Bruce Nauman and Alexander Calder. The result of lengthy research in the archives of Picasso’s first wife, the exhibition Olga Picasso comes to Málaga this winter, running until spring 2019. Over the summer, MPM will be showing work from European collections by unclassifiable artist Bruce Nauman. Finally, in the autumn, Calder-Picasso will examine these two artists’ exploratio

From 26th February to 2nd June 2019, Museo Picasso Málaga will be examining the life and background of Olga Khokhlova, Pablo Picasso’s first wife, in the first show of its 2019 exhibition calendar. Olga Picasso looks at the years they spent together, putting into perspective the creation of some of Picasso’s greatest works and reconstructing this body of work in the context of a personal story that developed alongside another political and social one. Picasso’s model par excellence, his imagined figure of Olga underwent a metamorphosis during the years of upheaval in Europe between the wars, as their relationship gradually deteriorated. Some 350 pieces will be on display, comprising paintings, works on paper, documents, letters, photographs and films. The exhibition is jointly curated by Émilia Philippot, conservator at Musée national Picasso - Paris; Joachim Pissarro, professor of art history and director of Hunter College Art Gallery (New York); and Bernard Ruiz-Picasso, co-chair of Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso, FABA. The exhibition was shown at the Museé national Picasso-Paris from March 21 to September 3, 2017. It will displayed at the Pushkin Museum in Moscow from November 19, 2018 to February 4, 2019, before travelling to Museo Picasso Málaga. The last venue will be Caixa Forum Madrid next September 2019.

During the summer months, from 18th June to 1st September 2019, Museo Picasso Málaga will be hosting the exhibition Bruce Nauman. Bruce Nauman (1941) is an American multimedia artist who has been active since the mid-20th century and whose innovative works are based on his personal understanding of art as an activity or process rather than the production of objects. He frequently reflects upon the human body, and his works highlight the relationships that are established between objects, the space around them and the observer. They exude references to music, dance, literature and philosophy, from Samuel Beckett to Merce Cunningham, generating in the viewer the kind of responses that are associated with provocation, conflict, tension, disorientation, and anxiety. His irony is clear from his wordplay and from the relationships he establishes between the viewer, space, and the artwork. Co-curated by Professor

Eugen Blume, from Germany, and MPM artistic director José Lebrero Stals, the exhibition brings together around a hundred works which display the wide range of techniques that Nauman employs, such as video, sculpture, installation, neon lighting, architectural structures, photography, and drawing. This is Nauman’s first major exhibition in Spain for 25 years.

Finally, from 24th September 2019 to 2nd February 2020, Calder-Picasso will be the first exhibition in Spain to explore the creative connections between two 20th-century modern masters: American artist Alexander Calder (1898-1976) and Málaga-born Pablo Picasso (1881-1973). While the dialogue between Calder and Picasso is filled with endless possibilities, a vital connection can be found in their exploration and exploitation of the void, or the absence of space, which both artists delineated from the figure through to abstraction. Calder and Picasso each dealt with the attributes of presenting or representing nonspace, whether by giving definition to a subtraction of mass, as in Calder’s sculpture, or by expressing contortions of time, as in Picasso’s portraits. Calder externalized the void through curiosity and intellectual expansion, engaging unseen forces in ways that challenge dimensional limitations, or what he called “grandeur immense.” Picasso personalized the exploration, focusing on the emotional inner self: bringing himself inside of each character and collapsing the interpersonal space between author and subject. Organized in collaboration with Musée national Picasso Paris, Calder Foundation, New York and Fundación Almine y Bernard Ruiz-Picasso, Madrid, the exhibition will open for the first time at the Musée national Picasso Paris in February 2019. Jointly curated by Alexander S. C. Rower, Calder Foundation; Bernard Ruiz-Picasso, FABA; Claire Garnier and Emilia Philippot, Musée national Picasso-Paris, in the Museo Picasso Málaga it will showcase around 110 artworks.

Each of the three exhibitions scheduled for next year will be accompanied by a programme of cultural activities that explore the main artistic and historical aspects they cover.

Related Exhibition

Calder-Picasso