The exhibition will be organized in collaboration with the Musée Picasso, Paris, and the Musée des Beaux Arts, Lyon. Gathering a selection of drawings and paintings produced between February and December 1937, it will revolve around Picasso’s masterpiece La Baignade (1937) owned by Peggy Guggenheim Collection, and one of its foundress’ favorite paintings. The exhibition will explore the theme of the beach, a leitmotif throughout the artist’s oeuvre: during his time spent in Provence in 1937, Picasso’s approach to this subject matter shifted, becoming increasingly visceral and more strongly connected to Surrealism.
Picasso on the Beach, exhibition at Venice. Information about Picasso on the Beach exhibition, the curators, the opening times, ticket prices, the numbers for reservations, the press release about the exhibition of the Peggy Guggenheim Collection museum of Venice.
Map
- City: Venice
- Province: Venice
- Address: Dorsoduro 701
- Phone#: +39 041.2405.411
- E-Mail info
- Official site
Scheda Mostra
Picasso on the Beach
Pablo Picasso
- Place: Peggy Guggenheim Collection
- Responsibles: Luca Massimo Barbero
- City: Venice
- Province: Venice
- Start date: 26 August 2017
- End date: 7 January 2018
- Ticket price: Adults: €15 Senior visitors over 65 yrs.: €13 Students under 26 yrs.: €9 (with current student ID) Children under 10 yrs., members: free
- Telefono per informazioni: +39 041.2405.411
- E-Mail info
- Official site
Press Release:
The exhibition will be organized in collaboration with the Musée Picasso, Paris, and the Musée des Beaux Arts, Lyon. Gathering a selection of drawings and paintings produced between February and December 1937, it will revolve around Picasso’s masterpiece La Baignade (1937) owned by Peggy Guggenheim Collection, and one of its foundress’ favorite paintings. The exhibition will explore the theme of the beach, a leitmotif throughout the artist’s oeuvre: during his time spent in Provence in 1937, Picasso’s approach to this subject matter shifted, becoming increasingly visceral and more strongly connected to Surrealism.