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Pablo Picasso Prints For Sale
Pablo Picasso's art reshaped the very notion of art itself through his groundbreaking exploration of form, color and shape which, decades after the artist's passing, still looks as revolutionary today as upon its creation. His iconic approach to form and line across his work witnesses the artist explore the very nature of the indelible creativity of the human spirit. Explore our latest Pablo Picasso art for sale at Guy Hepner, Picasso dealers since 2010.
Discover authentic Picasso lithocuts, prints and ceramics for sale below.
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Works
Pablo Picasso
·Toros, 1961India ink and watercolour on paper
Signed and dated21 5/8 x 16 1/2 in
55 x 42 cmCopyright The ArtistIn Toros (1961), Pablo Picasso returns to one of the most enduring symbols in his entire oeuvre: the bull. Executed in India ink and watercolour, this deceptively simple work fuses...In Toros (1961), Pablo Picasso returns to one of the most enduring symbols in his entire oeuvre: the bull. Executed in India ink and watercolour, this deceptively simple work fuses abstraction and figuration into a poetic tribute to the Spanish bullfight—a spectacle that captivated Picasso for most of his life. The fluidity of the ink wash, layered with pale brushstrokes to form crude, spectral figures, imbues the work with both immediacy and depth, conveying the raw, ritualistic power of the corrida.
The composition is minimal but highly expressive. A dynamic dark wash of black and grey covers most of the paper, serving as a dramatic stage upon which white, almost calligraphic forms emerge. These light marks sketch out a ghostly toreador on horseback, a seated spectator, and other undefined figures or movements, alluding to the drama of the arena. The word “TOROS” anchors the work at the center, printed over the dark wash like a poster or proclamation. Above it, energetic zigzag lines resemble the mountains or perhaps cheering crowds—ambiguous forms that reinforce the emotional texture rather than literal detail.
This work echoes the aesthetic freedom of Picasso’s late period, where he increasingly leaned into gestural, symbolic, and primal modes of representation. Here, we find a loose, painterly language akin to cave painting or ancient petroglyphs—stripped of fine detail but rich in archetypal power. The horse and bull become line and energy rather than anatomical form. This places the work closer in spirit to his ceramic experiments, his printmaking, and his 1940s Tauromaquia series.
The bull was more than a subject for Picasso—it was a recurring emblem of virility, power, violence, and death. A Spaniard in exile for most of his adult life, Picasso frequently returned to bullfighting as a nostalgic, mythic, and political motif. In Guernica (1937), the bull appears as a symbol of brutality and survival amid the horrors of war. In his drawings and prints, the bull often stands in for masculine force, instinct, and even the artist himself.
In Toros, however, the bull is not explicitly shown, but rather implied through the context and the figure of the horse-mounted picador. The absence of the bull sharpens the work’s atmospheric tension—it becomes more about the ritual and space of the bullfight than a literal retelling. The spectator and arena-like elements evoke the social and psychological theatre that surrounds violence and spectacle, inviting reflection rather than simply depiction.
By 1961, Picasso was 80 years old and entering one of his most prolific and expressive final decades. Far from slowing down, his late works display a remarkable synthesis of styles developed over a lifetime—Cubism, Surrealism, Neoclassicism, Expressionism—blended with childlike spontaneity and emotional directness. Toros reflects this freedom. It is not academic or detailed, but raw, immediate, and intensely personal. The inscription to Pierre Courthion, an art critic and close friend, adds a note of intimacy, positioning the work as both homage and artistic meditation.
Toros exemplifies Picasso’s unique ability to capture timeless themes with minimal means. It is not merely a scene of bullfighting, but a distilled essence of mythology, memory, and mortality—hallmarks of Picasso’s late genius.
For more information on Toros, contact our galleries via the inquiry form below.
Overview"Prints are like a diary of my artistic journey."
Discover authentic and rare Picasso linocuts, prints and ceramics for sale at Guy Hepner New York & London.
Pablo Picasso (1881–1973) is one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. As a co-founder of Cubism and a pioneer of modern art, Picasso's legacy spans multiple disciplines—painting, sculpture, drawing, printmaking, and ceramics. Few artists matched his innovation or productivity.
In 1958, at the age of 77, Picasso relocated to the South of France with Jacqueline Roque. No longer working from his Paris studio, he discovered a local printer and began exploring linocut printing—a bold, graphic technique that involves carving designs into linoleum blocks.
Over the next five years, he created more than 100 linocuts, many of which are now considered essential examples of mid-century modern printmaking. The most collectable works include: Portrait of a Woman after Cranach the Younger (1958), Portrait of a Woman in a Hat* (1962) and Still Life with Glass Under the Lamp (1962) which are considered standout examples of Picasso’s linocut and printmaking technique.
Alongside his printmaking, Picasso immersed himself in the world of ceramic, working with the Madoura Pottery studio in Vallauris, he produced over 3,500 ceramic works starting in the mid-1940s. Picasso ceramics range from playful plates and jugs to complex sculptural forms. These works often feature animals, faces, and mythological symbols, executed in a signature style that is unmistakably Picasso.
Today, collectors are increasingly drawn to Picasso ceramics for their charm, provenance, and investment potential. Whether you're looking for editioned ceramics or unique studio pieces, Picasso's ceramic works offer a tangible connection to his genius.
Guy Hepner offer a curated selection of authentic Picasso linocuts for sale and Picasso ceramics for sale, complete with provenance and authentication documents. Whether you're looking for a standout linocut or a rare ceramic piece from Madoura, our experienced team is here to help you find the perfect Picasso addition to your collection.
For more information on Picasso prints for sale or to buy Picasso ceramics, contact our galleries via info@guyhepner.com.ExhibitionsNews-
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