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Woman with a Crow, 1904 by Picasso

Woman with a Crow was produced towards the end of Picasso's 'blue period'. Here the blue tonality that had recently dominated Picasso's work is largely restricted to the rich, blue background that gives this work on eerie, nocturnal mood. The figure itself is represented in more naturalistic colours, though only loosely sketched in. The subject exudes mystery. A young woman kisses and gently caresses a crow - possibly a literary reference to the mysteries of Edgar Allan Poe (1809-49) - in a gesture of such tenderness that we sense a mood of loss or reverie.

Here Picasso used gouache and pastel on paper, applying thin washes of pale color over the more linear treatment of the hair, face and hand of the woman. This gives the figure a ghost-like ethereality, as if she might simply evaporate In the bottom half of the work, the figure seems to dematerialize, her body becoming one with the foreground space. The severe attenuation of the fingers and the profile of the hunched and bony shoulders also imply a frail physique and thus the overall mood of fragility is reinforced.

Masterpieces of Pablo Picasso

  • Guernica
    Guernica
  • Les Demoiselles d'Avignon
    Les Demoiselles d'Avignon
  • The Old Guitarist
    The Old Guitarist
  • Girl Before a Mirror
    Girl Before a Mirror
  • Three Musicians
    Three Musicians
  • Blue Nude
    Blue Nude
  • The Weeping Woman
    The Weeping Woman
  • The Dream
    The Dream
  • La Vie
    La Vie
  • The Women of Algiers
    The Women of Algiers
  • Ma Jolie
    Ma Jolie
  • Don Quixote
    Girl with Mandolin
  • Portrait of Gertrude Stein
    Portrait of Gertrude Stein
  • Family of Saltimbanques
    Family of Saltimbanques
  • Portrait of Ambroise Vollard
    Portrait of Ambroise Vollard
  • Massacre in Korea
    Massacre in Korea
  • Dora Maar Au Chat
    Dora Maar Au Chat
  • Seated Woman
    Seated Woman
  • Chicago Picasso
    Chicago Picasso
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