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Picasso: A Legacy – Final Chapters of a Master’s Life at London’s Halcyon Gallery


London: At Halcyon Gallery’s elegant London townhouse, the restless spirit of Pablo Picasso seems to breathe anew. Usually associated with contemporary blue-chip art, the space now turns to one of the 20th century’s most enduring figures. The result is a show that reframes Picasso not as the mythic revolutionary of Cubism, but as a late-career experimenter – a man working at full tilt to outpace time itself.



According to Anadolu Agency, the exhibition features more than 130 works, spanning the last four decades of Picasso’s life, from the 1930s through to his death in 1973. The selection focuses on two of his most personal mediums – works on paper and ceramics – and unfolds across six thematic sections: Artist and Model; Artist’s Muses; Alter Egos; Finding Peace; Still Lifes and Ceramics; and Creativity, Legacy and Death.



Picasso’s ceramics, created between 1948 and 1968 while the artist was living in Vallauris in the south of France, open the exhibition with a burst of vitality. Works such as Chouette (1968) and Vase Deux Anses Hautes (1953) reveal his delight in transforming simple forms into playful, anthropomorphic objects – owls, faces, and mythic beasts emerging from earthen clay. These pieces capture the artist at his most instinctive, when the act of making itself became a kind of freedom.



The gallery’s president, Paul Green, calls the show ‘a landmark exhibition’ that demonstrates Halcyon’s commitment to staging ‘exhibitions of international significance.’ The presentation, he adds, reflects Picasso’s ‘unrelenting creativity and influence on modern art.’ Alongside the ceramics are Picasso’s works on paper, which include lithographs, etchings, and linocuts that display his mastery of printmaking.



Among them are complete portfolios such as La Tauromaquia (1957-59) and La Guerre et la Paix (1954), seen here in rare proofs and multi-state editions. The sequence of images highlights Picasso’s obsessive working process – the way each idea mutates through trial, revision, and repetition.



Picasso’s portraiture dominates the exhibition’s emotional core. Works such as Femme au Fauteuil No. 4 (1949) and Jacqueline de Profil a Droite (1958) portray Francoise Gilot and Jacqueline Roque, two of the artist’s most significant muses in his later years. Through their faces and postures, one senses the artist’s oscillation between intimacy and distance, desire and detachment.



The show makes no attempt to resolve the contradictions of Picasso’s personal life, but it does illuminate how each relationship fueled a new stylistic direction. His muses were not simply subjects; they were catalysts for transformation. Elsewhere, the exhibition delves into Picasso’s fascination with mythology. The recurring minotaurs, fauns, and bulls – creatures that populated his imagination – appear as alter egos, stand-ins for the artist himself.



The final section, Creativity, Legacy and Death, turns toward Picasso’s final decade – a period of relentless productivity often interpreted as a race against mortality. These late works are less elegiac than exuberant, bristling with humor, self-parody, and bursts of color, suggesting not resignation but rebellion. Picasso’s gaze, even in his eighties, was fixed firmly on art history. His reworkings of old masters – Velazquez, Goya, Rembrandt – are less homage than confrontation. Through them, he measured himself against the canon, determined to secure his place within it. The show makes that ambition palpable: creativity here becomes a form of defiance.



Picasso: A Legacy is not a blockbuster retrospective but something more focused and revealing. By zeroing in on the artist’s last four decades, it reframes the familiar narrative of genius as a lifelong process of renewal – of starting again, again and again. For visitors, it offers an intimate encounter with the artist’s private experiments and shifting identities.