Pablo Picasso 'Scène d'intérieur' (B. 74; Ba. 241; Mourlot XXI)

Pablo Picasso 'Scène d'intérieur' (B. 74; Ba. 241; Mourlot XXI)

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Artist:  Pablo Picasso
Title: Scène d'intérieur (B. 74; Ba. 241; Mourlot XXI)
Size: 13 by 19⅜ in. 
Medium:
Lithograph on Van Gelder wove paper
Edition:
  41 of 100 
Year:  1926
Notes: Signed and numbered in pencil. Good Condition. Gallery COA Included. published by Galerie Simon Kahnweiler. The sheet is toned and with two spots of damp-stain in the left margin, the larger measuring approx. 4½ inches. A tiny repaired tear in the lower sheet edge at center and a small skinned spot in the margin at lower left. Acquired from Sotheby’s.
About: After revolutionizing art with Cubism alongside Georges Braque, Picasso became the defining visionary of 20th-century creativity. Born in Málaga in 1881 to an artist father, Picasso attended art schools in Spain. In his teens, he embraced the bohemian circles of Barcelona and Madrid, who challenged Spain’s conservative norms. Early on, Picasso’s work drew from diverse influences—El Greco’s intense figures, Symbolism’s dark outlines, and Art Nouveau’s flowing curves. Between 1905 and 1915, he unleashed groundbreaking originality: his emotive Rose and Blue Periods, mask-like portraits inspired by Iberian and African art, and the fragmented forms of Cubism, epitomized in Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (1907). Throughout his prolific career, Picasso explored a vast range of mediums, from theatre design to ceramics, sculpture, and public art. His prints and drawings often featured mythological themes, notably the Minotaur, a symbol of his own identity. In his final years, Picasso engaged in dialogue with the old masters, creating works that reinterpreted icons by Poussin, Velázquez, and others—just as future artists would respond to him. Pablo Picasso died in 1972 at age ninety-one.