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5 must-see pieces at M+'s ‘Picasso for Asia' exhibition
5 must-see pieces at M+'s ‘Picasso for Asia' exhibition

South China Morning Post

time24-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South China Morning Post

5 must-see pieces at M+'s ‘Picasso for Asia' exhibition

Looking to learn more about one of the 20th century's greatest painters? Head to Hong Kong's M+ museum for the Picasso for Asia – A Conversation exhibition exploring the legendary Pablo Picasso through a contemporary Asian lens. This show blends over 60 works by the legendary Spanish artist with 130 pieces by 30 Asian and Asian-diasporic artists, creating a vibrant dialogue between East and West. It is the first major exhibition of Picasso's work in Hong Kong in more than a decade and is set to cement Hong Kong's status as a cultural hotspot. Here are some must-see pieces that steal the show, perfect for Young Post readers looking to dive into this creative fusion.

Picasso in Asia: At last, a Picasso exhibition that trusts people to think for themselves
Picasso in Asia: At last, a Picasso exhibition that trusts people to think for themselves

Telegraph

time26-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Telegraph

Picasso in Asia: At last, a Picasso exhibition that trusts people to think for themselves

More than 50 years after his death, the 20th century's most celebrated, prolific and daring artist continues to enchant and enrage us. This month, one of the most ambitious Picasso exhibitions in recent years opens at M+ Hong Kong's new mega gallery. Picasso for Asia – A Conversation features more than 60 works, most on loan from the Musée Picasso in Paris – including some that have never travelled before – alongside work by Asian and Asian diaspora artists born between the 1860s and the 1990s. You might think there would be nothing left to say about Picasso. What sets this show apart is its breadth and rigour in revealing new complexities in the work of an artist who often makes western galleries and museums merely anxious. The aim of the 'conversation' format with Asian artists,, says co-curator Doryun Chong, is to show 'how artists relate to and critique one another across time and cultures'. But it is never easy to compete for attention with Picasso, who often outdoes the others on show in skill and nuance. Picasso's sophisticated cubist works, including Woman's Head (1909) on loan from Museo Sofia in Madrid, are hung alongside Gunpowder Drawing No 8-A5, a 1988 piece by Cai Guo-Qiang for which the Fujian artist literally blew up the canvas. Many more major pieces span his long life: the loving, stripped-down oil portrait of his father, painted in 1895 when Picasso was 16. Most affecting are three from the artist's final years: Couple (1970-71), The Old Man (1970) and The Matador (1970) – all painted with such urgency and scale he seems to be trying to outrun death. The show ends with a delightful installation that allows us to paint along with an elderly Picasso on digital screens as he draws flowers and animals with brief brushstrokes in films running on huge screens. The star of this show reveals itself at the end. In Massacre in Korea, a painting the quick-handed Picasso started and finished in a single day in January 1951, an armoured, masked firing squad takes aim at a group of naked women and children. All Picasso's attention is on the victims' faces and how each responds in startlingly different ways: anguished, serene, bewildered, detached. Like Guernica, this is far from propaganda; here, at least, Picasso treats women subjected to violence as complex, sympathetic and deeply human. Picasso, then 69, painted his only work on an Asian theme from his home in France – a scene from a proxy war between superpowers that had broken out seven months earlier, when the armies of Soviet-backed North Korea invaded the US-backed South Korea. By then, Picasso was a socialist, anti-war and anti-Fascist. Contrast that Picasso with the man reflected in a room elsewhere, in which the curators deal with Picasso's misogyny and sometimes violent treatment of the women with whom he was involved. Here, Picasso's portraits of Maris-Thérèse Walter, Dora Marr, Nusch Eluard and what is likely a sculptural portrait of Françoise Gilot are positioned opposite a film by British-Asian artist Nalini Malani, about a woman murdered by her lover who comes back to life to clean up the bloody mess. 'We know now about his violent temper and so we say it clearly,' says Chong. But Chong adds that Picasso is less divisive in Hong Kong, where audiences are 'not as familiar' with his work. (Chong says he tested the room's format with young women on the gallery's staff.) Making the point and moving on is one way to deal with Picasso's misogyny – albeit briefly. But at least Chong and co-curator Francois Dareau credit us with the agency to absorb Picasso's contradictions. Unlike other recent, well-publicised Picasso exhibitions, most recently It's Pablo-matic, an embarrassingly overwrought and overbearing 2023 show at the Brooklyn Museum curated by the Australian comedian Hannah Gadsby, with a title that one critic wrote was 'so silly I can't even type it'. Picasso's misogyny is indisputable, and this show will likely enrage some people. But in a febrile debate, it's encouraging to find a cool-headed curatorial approach to the artist's faults and contradictions, and curators with the confidence to trust an audience to think critically – for themselves.

Picasso masterpieces join modern Asian artworks in a conversation of creativity at M+ in Hong Kong
Picasso masterpieces join modern Asian artworks in a conversation of creativity at M+ in Hong Kong

South China Morning Post

time21-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • South China Morning Post

Picasso masterpieces join modern Asian artworks in a conversation of creativity at M+ in Hong Kong

Picasso. One of those historical figures so famous they fly solo in the name game. Advertisement But who, or what, is Picasso, really? An umbrella or drinks coaster? T-shirt, necklace or bobblehead? Shopping bag or small family car? The commodification of the artistically prominent demands they be reduced to a token of modern life – an adornment, an implement, an everyday essential, even something in which to drive around – putting them everywhere and nowhere all at once. The more we see the signature 'Picasso' the less we look at or think about his art, or consider the man himself. Which is where M+ , in partnership with France's Musée national Picasso-Paris (MnPP), comes in. The special exhibition, 'Picasso for Asia – A Conversation', which runs at M+ until July 13, reveals a surprisingly slippery character while also showing us what and whom we didn't know we didn't know: the master behind the myth. A portrait of Pablo Picasso displayed at the M+ 'Picasso for Asia – A Conversation' exhibition. Photo: Alexander Mak The contradictions barring the way to a fundamental understanding of Pablo Picasso are tricky, even for the experts, not least because the artist gave so few interviews. And because many ideas and opinions glibly attributed to him might not have been his at all. Advertisement 'It's so confusing, all the time,' admits François Dareau, MnPP research fellow and co-curator of the M+ exhibition. 'We have only a few recordings of Picasso's voice. But when you see all the quotes in books and articles, they are so well written it means that everything was rewritten by many other people. It's very difficult to approach the real man behind the image. You don't recognise his real voice.'

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