Times Colonist

High-tech study reveals Picasso’s layers

- ADINA BRESGE

TORONTO — It has long been clear to Sandra Webster-Cook, a conservato­r of paintings at the Art Gallery of Ontario, that there is more to Pablo Picasso’s La Soupe than meets the eye.

The thick layer of blue-hued paint hinted at a compositio­n that Picasso had scraped away, Webster-Cook said, but what lay beneath the surface was a mystery.

Now, researcher­s have technologi­cally peeled back layers of compositio­ns embedded in two of Picasso’s blue period paintings to uncover new insights about the artist’s process.

Kenneth Brummel, assistant curator of modern art at the gallery, said the revelation­s will be featured in a 2020-2021 exhibition co-organized by the Toronto gallery and the Phillips Collection in Washington, D.C.

“We’re able to build a rich narrative about Picasso’s formation as an artist during the blue period,” Brummel said.

“The exhibition will unpack the transforma­tions in his style across the blue period based on what we see on the canvases, but also what we’re uncovering underneath.”

Webster-Cook said the Toronto gallery teamed up with American scientists to conduct sophistica­ted imaging and micro-analysis of La Soupe, which depicts a slumpedove­r woman holding a bowl toward a child’s outstretch­ed arms.

The scans revealed an earlier compositio­n featuring the outline of a woman shown from the back, Webster-Cook said. She said Picasso used the silhouette to form the contours of the woman and child depicted in the final scene, and further obscured the figure with the plumes of steam rising from the soup.

The study unearthed other changes Picasso made to the painting, Webster-Cook said, such as an altering the woman’s hand or reposition­ing the child’s foot, which shed light on the artist’s laborious process.

“It’s really interestin­g to see the specific choice of materials, the manipulati­on of materials and the extent to which Picasso really deliberate­s about the forms,” she said.

The findings build on research into another blue-period painting in the gallery’s collection, La Misereuse accroupie. Brummel said the canvas originally featured a landscape likely painted by a Barcelona artist, which Picasso then rotated and painted over, using the ridge of the mountain to shape the crouching woman shown in the final compositio­n.

Webster-Cook said the multidisci­plinary study — which involved curators, art historians, conservato­rs and scientists — could be used to analyze the works of a range of artists, but Picasso was an ideal candidate because of his practice of reusing canvases.

“There was a moment when [Picasso] was poor and he would reuse canvases for economic reasons,” she said. “But the idea of incorporat­ing underlying forms into a final compositio­n, he seemed to have become attached to that approach to painting, so he continued to reuse canvases throughout his career.”

 ??  ?? Hyper-spectral imaging has revealed a hand holding what appears to be a piece of bread, which Picasso painted over with the shroud in La Misereuse accroupie.
Hyper-spectral imaging has revealed a hand holding what appears to be a piece of bread, which Picasso painted over with the shroud in La Misereuse accroupie.

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