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Still Life with Watermelon (B.1098), 1963

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Medium: hand-signed linocut on Arches
Year: 1963
Edition: 160

Sheet Size: 24.5 x 29.62"
Image Size: 23 x 28"
Framed Size: 38.5 x 44"

Signature: signed 'Picasso' and annotated lower right
Reference: Bloch 1098; Baer 1301.B.i.2

Literature: Bloch, G. Pablo Picasso: Tome I – Catalogue de l’œuvre grave et lithographié 1904-1967. Galerie Kornfeld & Cie., Berne, 1998. pg. 231. no. 1098.

Baer, B. Picasso Peintre-Graveur: Tome V - Catalogue Raisonné de l’œuvre Gravé et Des Monotypes 1959-1965. Galerie Kornfeld, Berne, 1989. pgs. 407-410. no. 1301.B.i.2.

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Still Life with Watermelon (B.1098), 1963 by Pablo Picasso
Still Life with Watermelon (B.1098), 1963
Still Life with Watermelon (B.1098), 1963
Still Life with Watermelon (B.1098), 1963
Still Life with Watermelon (B.1098), 1963
Still Life with Watermelon (B.1098), 1963
Still Life with Watermelon (B.1098), 1963
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About the Work
About the Artist

About the Work

"Still Life with Watermelon (B.1098)" is a linocut on Arches created by Pablo Picasso in 1963. From the edition of 160, the artwork is signed 'Picasso' and annotated lower right. The image size is 23 x 28" and the artwork is framed in a custom Spanish-style, closed-corner, black and gold frame. The artwork ships framed and is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity.

About the Artist

Pablo Ruiz Picasso was born on October 26, 1881, in Malaga, Spain. His father was a professor in the School of Arts and Crafts and often took him to bullfights which would influence much of his art throughout his career. It is said that Picasso learned to draw before he could speak. Picasso studied the works and styles of many Spanish artists including Francisco Goya, El Greco, and Diego Velázquez. At the beginning of the 1900s, Picasso moved to Paris, France to open his own studio. He was lonely and depressed after the death of a close friend, which ignited what is now known as his “Blue Period”. A few years later, Picasso started the “Rose Period”, which introduced warmer colors to his works. Picasso is commonly known as the pioneer of Cubism, in which objects are broken apart and reassembled in an abstracted form; it is destructive and creative. Cubism shocked, appalled and fascinated the art world.

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