Bangkok Post

Picasso’s rarely seen ceramics featured at Kennedy Center

- BRETT ZONGKER

While Pablo Picasso crafted thousands of ceramic pieces late in his career that reflected his Mediterran­ean and Spanish roots, this art was long overshadow­ed by his famous paintings and sculptures.

Now a major exhibition of Picasso’s ceramics is making its US debut as the centrepiec­e of a new Iberian arts festival at the Kennedy Center in Washington. Many people don’t know about Picasso the ceramicist, so curators brought together more than 140 pieces to showcase his work.

Picasso’s approach was a departure from the centuries-old traditions of smooth and polished ceramics as he created his own shapes in clay and employed his own colourful painting style. Curators said they hope the exhibit surprises many visitors who already know some of Picasso’s work.

“He would really reinvent ceramics ... he completely upended the way that you worked with clay” with a more roughhewn approach, said Josephine Matamoros, a Paris-based curator who created the exhibit.

The free exhibition opens today, requiring timed-entry tickets. “Picasso, Ceramicist And The Mediterran­ean” will be on view until March 22. It was originally conceived for a Marseille-Provence 2013 cultural festival in France and last year and was shown at the National Museum of Ceramics near Paris.

As a ceramicist, Picasso would transform traditiona­l clay shapes, such as a water jug farmers would take into the fields. He moulded the tall jug into the shape of a woman, creating a kind of sculpture. In the case of an oval serving platter, Picasso painted a bullfighti­ng arena surrounded by spectators, evoking a favourite subject from his native Spain.

While living much of his life on the French Riviera and vowing not to return to Spain under its fascist regime, Picasso idealises his homeland, curators said. His ceramics provide a window into Picasso’s deep attachment to Mediterran­ean culture, Matamoros said. The artist would die in 1973 without ever returning to Spain.

The three-week, $6 million (195 million baht) Iberian arts festival, “Iberian Suite: Global Arts Remix”, will also feature theatre, music, dance, design and fashion from Spain, Portugal and the regions they have influenced around the world for centuries.

Performanc­e highlights include Spanish flamenco dancer Sara Baras; Latin-Grammy winner and Spanish singer Buika with Cuban artist Ivan “Melon” Lewis and theatre from Portugal, Spain and Brazil. Contempora­ry artists from Portugal, such as Nuno Vasa, have created visual art installati­ons. Vasa, from Lisbon, Portugal, created a full-size cable car out of cork — a major Portuguese export — as an homage to Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa, who wrote about cable cars.

Festival curator Alicia Adams said she wanted to show the mix of cultures.

“It actually is about cultural exchange and transforma­tion over a very long period of time because of the impact of the explorers from the 15th century from the Iberian Peninsula and where they went,” Adams said. “These exploratio­ns changed the world.”

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Picasso in 1959.
Spanish artist Pablo Picasso in 1959.

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