Pablo Picasso

Marie-Thérèse Dreaming of Metamorphoses: Herself and the Sculptor Drinking with a Young Greek Actor Playing the Role of Minotaur (Marie-Thérèse rêvant de métamorphoses: elle-même et le sculpteur buvant avec un jeune acteur grec jouant le rôle du Minotaure), state IV, from the Vollard Suite (Suite Vollard)

1933, published 1939

Drypoint, etching, and engraving

Not on view

The mythical Minotaur—part man, part bull—was Picasso's alter ego in the 1930s and part of a broader exploration of Classicism that persisted in his work for many years. The Minotaur was also emblematic for Surrealists, who saw it as the personification of forbidden desires. For Picasso it expressed complex emotions at a time of personal turmoil. The Minotaur symbolized lasciviousness, violence, guilt, and despair.

Gallery label from

Picasso: Variations and Themes, March 28–September 30, 2010.

Medium Drypoint, etching, and engraving
Dimensions plate: 11 11/16 x 14 3/8" (29.7 x 36.5 cm); sheet: 13 3/8 x 17 7/16" (34 x 44.3 cm)
Publisher Vollard, Paris
Printer Lacourière, Paris
Edition 260
Credit Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Fund
Object number 235.1949
Department Drawings and Prints

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Pablo Picasso

Pablo Picasso

Spanish, 1881–1973 1251 works online

With these words, Picasso shed light on two central principles of his artistic production over nearly 80 years: his openness to a diverse range of styles, subject matters, and mediums, and his resistance to the notion that change in art necessarily corresponds to improvement or progress.

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