Pablo Picasso

Picasso Pots

Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) started creating ceramic works in 1940. Impressed by the quality of the Madoura works, he was introduced to the owners, Suzanne and Georges Ramié, who gave Picasso access to all the tools and resources he needed to express his creativity with ceramics. In exchange, the Ramié family would produce and sell his

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The pottery of Robert Picault, handcrafted alongside Pablo Picasso

Pablo Picasso worked with a close friend Robert Picault in the idyllic coastal town of Vallauris from 1948-1953. During this time there was a revival of decorative pottery with numerous key creators – the Massier family, Roger Capron, Robert Picault and of course Picasso who, inspired by the turquoise of the Mediterranean created beautiful ceramic

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A Legacy in Clay: The Ceramics of Pablo Picasso in Return to Earth

Presented September 21, 2013. 'Pablo Picasso: Life with Art' – Dakin Hart, Senior Curator, The Noguchi Museum, New York In this presentation Dakin Hart explores Picasso’s transition to ceramic practice after World War Two. Tracing the personal, social and political factors which lead to Picasso’s desire to create objects which merged both sculpture and painting

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Pablo Picasso’s Ceramics Changed Pottery Forever

Pablo Picasso loved to experiment. Between 1946 and 1973, he turned his creative gaze to the world of ceramics, creating a breathtaking collection of original ceramic works and revolutionizing the art form for decades to come. Learn more about the history of Picasso's remarkable ceramics here: Learn more about Pablo Picasso here: Interested in collecting

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