FROM PICASSO TO JASPER JOHNS

BNF - just see the poster for expo.
The BNF, is I feel, a very off putting building, even to the extent of being « unfriendly ». If one doesn’t want to climb the stairs, there is a rather long detour to go up a hill and then enter the patio. After that you have to find the exhibition centre. What I really mean, is that there has to be a very good reason for going there:

It was this…….



 
Poster outside the BNF




From Picasso to Jasper Johns – Aldo Crommelynck’s workshop. 

Now who Aldo Crommelynck was - I certainly didn’t know. Here’s a text straight off the BNF home page.
Aldo Crommelynck (1931-2008), printer of works of art, contributed in making Paris a famous city in the field of prints and engravings. Introduced to printing by the master-printer Roger Lacourière, he opens his own workshop in 1956 and collaborates with Tal Coat, Juan Miro, Le Corbusier, Alberto Giacometti, André Masson, Georges Braque... His younger brother, Piero, comes and works with him. In 1963, the Crommelynck brothers put in a printing press in Mougins, near Picasso’s house and then work almost exclusively with the artist. They are always ready to collaborate, which incites Picasso to be particularly creative. In 1969, the Parisian workshop is moved to the rue de Grenelle and mainly welcomes Avigdor Arikha, Sam Szafran, Yuri Kuper, George Condo. Following Richard Hamilton, foreign artists attracted by the reputation of Picasso’s printer go to the workshop. The major part of them are English and American: David Hockney, Peter Blake, Jim Dine, Ed Ruscha, Jasper Johns, Donald Sultan… But the workshop also welcomes the Italian artists belonging to the Trans-avant-garde movement, Cucci and Clemente, the German painter, Penck and the Swiss artist Martin Disler. From the eighties to the end of his career, Aldo Crommelynck shares his time between Paris and the United-States where he mainly collaborates with Pace prints. When he worked with worldwide famous artists, Aldo Crommelynck asked them to sign prints intended to the Bibliothèque nationale de France. Today, these prints enrich the heritage collections of the library in an exceptional way. 
What is remarkable I suppose is that they worked with Picasso virtually in exclusivity for all those years.....


 

 
Picasso - Painter and model 1963


Picaso - smoker with a green cigarette 1964

Self portrait with a stick with an actor in costume , love chubbiness and women - 1968



The patron who makes angels 1971

Picasso - Raphael at tge Fornarina XXll 1968

 
Pablo Picasso Mousquetaire attablé avec un jeune garço, 1968



I’ve always been very confused about engraving as certain pictures I have seen, I would swear they were etchings or even water colors. I spent a lot of time really studying each image - and as I could photograph, took quite a lot - and then sometimes forgot to get the title of the picture. Sorry about that.

 
Jim Dine (1935-) A Heart on the Rue de Grenelle :1981


Jasper Johns (1930-) Periscope, 1981

Jasper Johns

Jennfer Bartlett (1941-) Bridge, Boat Dog, 1997

Jennfer Bartlett (1941-) Bridge, Boat Dog, 1997

Jennfer Bartlett (1941-) Bridge, Boat Dog, 1997

Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960-1988) Living Sperm, around 1986






George Condo (1957-) Clown, 1989

Aldo Crommelynck - - after Pablo Picasso, 1952

Red Grooms (1937-) Portrait of AC, 1994







 Some of these look so much like water colours to my eye.....


Red Grooms, Grand Central Station,  1994

David Hockney (1937-) Simplified Faces State ll -1973

David Hockney Felicity sleeping witha Parrot, 1974




Gunther Forg (1952-2013)

Martin Disler (1949-1996) Gravure O, 1984

A.R.Penck (1939-) What is gravitation? 1984

A.R.Penck Children in puberty 1984

Richard Hamilton (1922-2011) Leopold Bloom, 1983

Avigdor Arikha (1929-2010) Samuel Beckett, 1970













Jim Dine (1935-) Paris smiles in Darkness, 1976

Richard Hamilton (1922-2011) Picasso's Meninas, 1973

George COndo (1957-) Untitled 1989

David Hockney (1937-) Artist and model.



Once again, even if it was Sunday, I was pretty much alone



 





 apart from two ladies who were discussing their life stories and vaguely looking at each picture. I get very irritated with such people……like being in the metro with a passenger next you who is on his/her mobile ‘phone.

Commentaires

Michael Keane a dit…
Wonderful images.

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