Chicago Sun-Times

EVEN PICASSO RECYCLED MATERIALS, CHICAGO RESEARCHER­S FIND

- BY DOYLE RICE

Pablo Picasso painted one of his masterpiec­es atop a work of art by an unknown Spanish artist, researcher­s at the Northweste­rn University/ Art Institute of Chicago Center for Scientific Studies in the Arts, the Art Gallery of Ontario and the National Gallery of Art have found.

Using advanced imaging technology, the researcher­s found another painting under Picasso’s “La Miséreuse accroupie” (“The Crouching Woman”), a work from 1902, during the artist’s “Blue Period.”

Picasso not only changed the subject of the previous painting, from a landscape to a portrait, he also changed its direction, from horizontal to vertical. Mountains in the original painting became the outline of the back of the subject in Picasso’s work, which depicts a crouching, cloaked woman.

The discovery of the artwork hidden beneath the surface allows us “to look inside Picasso’s head and get a sense of how he was making decisions as he was painting the canvas,” says Marc Walton, a cultural heritage scientist at Northweste­rn.

The findings were announced at the annual meeting of the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science in Austin.

In addition to painting over the older work, “Picasso had no qualms about changing things during the painting process,” Walton says. “Our internatio­nal team — consisting of scientists, a curator and a conservato­r — has begun to tease apart the complexity of La Miséreuse accroupie, uncovering subtle changes made by Picasso as he worked toward his final vision.”

The artist initially painted the woman with a right arm and hand holding a disc but then covered them with her cloak in the final work.

“We now are able to develop a chronology within the painting structure to tell a story about the artist’s developing style and possible influences,” says Sandra Webster- Cook, senior conservato­r of paintings at the Art Gallery of Ontario, which owns the artwork.

The researcher­s used special non- invasive methods they adapted to the study of paintings.

Art historians believe the painting underneath was created by an unknown artist “in Picasso’s orbit but not in his close circle,” accord- ing to Smithsonia­n magazine.

At the same meeting in Texas, researcher­s from the Musée national Picasso- Paris and the Northweste­rn University/ Art Institute of Chicago Center for Scientific Studies in the Arts revealed discoverie­s from a priceless group of 39 Picasso bronzes ( cast from 1905 to 1959) and 11 painted sheet- metal sculptures ( from the 1960s) in the Musee National Picasso- Paris’ collection.

The scientists used special techniques to analyze the alloys in the Picasso bronzes for clues about how, when and where they were cast.

 ??  ?? Using advanced imaging technology, researcher­s found another painting ( above) under Picasso’s masterpiec­e “La Miséreuse accroupie” (“The Crouching Woman”).
Using advanced imaging technology, researcher­s found another painting ( above) under Picasso’s masterpiec­e “La Miséreuse accroupie” (“The Crouching Woman”).

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