Suvarna Garge (Editor)

The Three Dancers

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Year
  
1925

Location
  
Tate Gallery, London

Dimensions
  
2.15 m x 1.42 m

Media
  
Oil paint

Support
  
Canvas

Medium
  
Oil on canvas

Artist
  
Pablo Picasso

Period
  
Cubism

Created
  
June 1925–June 1925

The Three Dancers totallyhistorycomwpcontentuploads201212Pabl

Similar
  
Pablo Picasso artwork, Cubist artwork, Oil paintings

Pablo picasso s the three dancers tateshots


The Three Dancers (French: Les Trois Danseuses[1]) is a painting by Spanish artist Pablo Picasso, painted in June 1925. It is an oil on canvas and measures 84.8 in x 56 in (215.3 cm x 142.2 cm).[2]

Contents

Description

The painting shows three dancers, the one on the right being barely visible. A macabre dance takes place, with the dancer on the left having her head bent at a near-impossible angle. The dancer on the right is usually interpreted as being Ramon Pichot, a friend of Picasso who died during the painting of Three Dancers. (Some critics believe it could well be Picasso's wife Olga Khokhlova.[3]) The one on the left is claimed to be Pichot’s wife Germaine Gargallo with the one in the centre being Gargallo’s boyfriend Carlos Casagemas, also Picasso’s friend.[4] Casagemas shot himself after failing to shoot Gargallo, twenty-five years before Pichot’s death, and the loss of two of his best friends spurred Picasso to paint this chilling depiction of the love triangle.

Background

Picasso painted The Three Dancers in Paris after a trip to Monte Carlo with his wife, ballet dancer Olga Khokhlova. At this time, Picasso was attracted to André Breton's Surrealism movement.[5] In 1926 the painting appeared in Breton's work Le surréalisme et la peinture (Surrealism and Painting). Others link Three Dancers to Picasso's failing marriage to Khokhlova.[6]

Its caption at the Tate Gallery gives some insight into the background of the painting:

It is owned by the Tate Gallery, London, having been purchased by it in 1965, and is currently on display as part of the Tate Modern's 'Poetry and Dream' exhibition.[8] The purchase was facilitated by Picasso's friendship with Roland Penrose who was a trustee of the Tate at that time.

References

The Three Dancers Wikipedia