Explaining the genesis of Picasso’s great linocut Buste de Femme d’après Cranach le Jeune, Picasso’s dealer Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler (1884-1979) said: ‘One of Picasso’s notable characteristics was his need to transform existing works of art, to compose ‘variations on a theme’, as it were. His point of departure was often simply a reproduction in a book; or even a postcard sent by myself, such as Cranach the Younger’s Portrait of a Woman [1564] in Vienna, which became his first linocut in colour. Among other things, what struck him in particular about this painting was the way the woman’s shadow ‘rhymes’ with the upper part of her body... This need to transform was certainly an important characteristic of Picasso’s genius.’ (D.-H. Kahnweiler, ‘Introduction: A Free Man’, in Picasso: In Retrospect, R. Penrose and J. Golding (eds.), New York, 1980, p. 8-9.)
Picasso had made a preparatory linocut (Baer 1052) after this postcard the day before executing Buste de Femme. This preliminary work, printed in black from one block, follows Cranach’s composition closely - the young girl is depicted in three-quarter profile and faces in the same direction as the painting, requiring Picasso to reverse the image in the cutting. The effect is somewhat labored, and when Picasso revisited the subject again the following day, he abandoned this creative hindrance, this time cutting the subject freely and adapting Cranach’s composition in a much more spontaneous way. The result is a tour de force of printmaking: with fluid cuts of the linocut gouge and the overprinting of bright, flat colour from five separate blocks, Picasso amplified what he had described to Kahnweiler as the painting’s ‘internal rhymes’. Flattening the pictorial space, the bulging shadow on the girl’s right now merges with the undulating shape of her black bodice and shoulders, themselves echoed in the loops of the gold chain and hair net, and by the curved strokes in the background. The girl’s features are playfully distorted, so that we seem to see her from the front and in full profile simultaneously. Picasso described his desire to ‘paint against the canvases that are important to me…that’s painting: for a painter it means wrestling with painting’ to André Malraux (A. Malraux, Picasso’s Mask, Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1976, p. 118.) This antagonistic attitude is also reflected in his iconoclastic transformation of Cranach’s delicate portrait into an exuberant display of colour and rhythmic patterns in this most layered and painterly of all his prints.
The present impression is remarkable for the freshness and strength of its colours and the liveliness of the printed surface.