"The movement
of my thought interests me more than the thought itself."
--Picasso
Those who have seen any of the three large lithographs of Balzac
and found them wanting because of their unsaturated, faint black
line may be pleasantly surprised to behold these eight smaller
lithographs. Despite their size, they pack a more powerful punch
because of the fully saturated, deep black line with which they
were inked, not to mention their rich, yellow background, a not
inconsequential bonus for all the color-starved Picasso lovers
out there.
In 1935, Picasso imparted the following thought to Christian Zervos,
his friend and chronicler, "It would be very interesting to
preserve photographically, not the stages, but the metamorphoses
of a picture. Possibly one might then discover the path followed
by the brain in materializing a dream." Dora Maar actually
produced such a photographic record of the creation of Guernica.
Some of the progressive stages of The Charnel House were
also photographed. But it seems to me that Picasso most thoroughly
realized this ideal in his printmaking. I am not aware of any statements
of his or of his collaborators to this effect, but it is hard to
imagine that Picasso was unaware that the restless explorations
of his creative process were immortalized in his prints. After
all, he famously worked and reworked many of his prints, and thankfully
produced a printed record at many steps along the way. Proofs were
pulled during the often numerous "states" of his prints,
though usually in very small numbers. Between states, he attacked
his prints in various and increasingly innovative ways, all the
while recording his wondrously transformative quantum bursts of
creativity. Prints provided Picasso a medium well suited to his
method, since, by burnishing the intaglio plate and polishing the
lithographic stone, he could subtract detail as well as add it
in. He was clearly aware of the central importance of his subtractive
proclivity, as he said to Zervos in the same conversation, "In
the old days pictures went forward toward completion by stages.
Every day brought something new. A picture used to be a sum of
additions. In my case a picture is a sum of destructions."
Although he had been speaking about his painting, perhaps the
most well-known example of Picasso's "destructive technique" is
the eleven stages of the lithograph entitled Le Taureau (The
Bull, 1945-1946, Mourlot 17, Bloch number 389), in which he
toys with various conceptual ways of rendering the creature, initially
complicating but then mostly simplifying his design until nothing
is left but a pinhead and a simple, mostly stick-figure outline.
Another example is this series of nine wonderfully amusing lithographs
of Balzac, eight of which were published in this elegant folio
(Bloch numbers 715 through 722). The unusual aspect of this series
is that it is impossible to purchase a large group of Picasso's
consecutive riffs on a single theme, especially for a rather affordable
price (in the very low five figures, that is; these prints are
also individually available for around $2000-3000 a pop). Most
of Picasso's variations took the form of successive states of the
same print. But once he reworked the stone or plate, these variations
were lost forever, apart from the one, two or three artist's proofs
that were typically pulled of each state. These are usually in
museums, are otherwise very hard to find, and are generally pricey.
Balzac's imposing physiognomy must have been artistically compelling.
Rodin fell prey to it, and Picasso clearly could not escape its
charm. This set of eight lithographs presents a superior example
of the easy marriage Picasso had arranged between fine art and
caricature. It also displays a charming graphic progression of
alternately diminishing and increasing complexity as Picasso plays
with different ways of rendering the novelist's face. First he
toys with Balzac's coiffure and brow. Then he adds some gravity
to Balzac's expression. Next he strips away as much detail as he
can while still retaining the essence of "Balzacness".
In the last two images, Picasso rebuilds the face with his signature
stylizations, now playing the opposite game of how many of them
the face could juggle while yet retaining its essential nature.
Each portrait of Balzac is marvelous in and of itself, but the
set when viewed as a whole is even more riveting than the sum of
its parts. It is a truly rare experience to behold at once
the consecutive results of the artist's creativity, but this series
offers no less than just that.
Here's how these gems came to be. As Mourlot relates, "Picasso
arrived in Paris for a few days and I asked him to do a portrait
of Balzac for the publisher Sauret.... The following morning....Picasso
handed me 8 litho drawings....numbered from I to VIII as well as
three large compositions. A few days later, he re-worked a crayon
litho [unnumbered by Picasso, Bloch 722]....of the same subject." The
lithograph numbered II was chosen as the frontispiece for Sauret's
publication of Balzac's Le Pere Goriot, and the remaining eight
were later published in the book presented here.