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Pablo Picasso, Buste de Femme (Dora Maar) State I (Bloch 308), 1938

Pablo Picasso

Buste de Femme (Dora Maar) State I (Bloch 308), 1938
Etching, aquatint, scraper and engraving on Montval laid paper; untrimmed (deckled edges on all four sides) with wide margins all around
9 1/2 x 5 1/8 in
24 x 13 cm
Edition of 15
Series: Etching
Copyright The Artist
View on a Wall
This work, Buste de Femme (Dora Maar), State I, is an etching enriched with aquatint, scraper, and engraving on Montval laid paper, and it offers a compelling example of Picasso’s...
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This work, Buste de Femme (Dora Maar), State I, is an etching enriched with aquatint, scraper, and engraving on Montval laid paper, and it offers a compelling example of Picasso’s mastery of intaglio printmaking. Dedicated to his muse Dora Maar, the piece demonstrates not only his technical command of etching but also his ability to translate psychological complexity and symbolic resonance through the simplest of linear means.


Etching provided Picasso with a way to explore line in its purest form—direct, incisive, and permanent. Unlike lithography, which could feel spontaneous and painterly, etching required a more deliberate, crafted approach, where the artist’s marks were bitten into the metal plate by acid. In Buste de Femme (Dora Maar), Picasso combines etching with aquatint (which creates tonal effects), engraving (which deepens the line), and scraper techniques (used to soften or erase areas), showing a full range of intaglio methods in a single work.

The use of Montval laid paper, prized for its strength and subtle texture, enhances the crispness of the etched lines, allowing every mark—whether delicate or bold—to register with clarity. The medium’s inherent gravitas also matches the weight of the subject matter, elevating the portrait from mere likeness to symbolic image.


The portrait presents Dora Maar in Picasso’s characteristic late 1930s style, where figuration is abstracted and fractured but still tethered to recognizable features. Dora’s head, elongated and angular, is both human and mask-like, her eyes depicted with cross-like motifs that suggest intensity and mystery. Her body, reduced to geometric forms and simplified curves, carries both solidity and vulnerability.

At the bottom of the plate, Picasso inscribes a block of text—an unusual feature in his etched portraits—that introduces an almost diaristic element, merging image and writing into a unified statement. The combination of spare line and textual presence creates a work that is simultaneously portrait, symbol, and reflection.


By the late 1930s, Picasso had already established himself as one of the greatest printmakers of the 20th century. His technical innovations in etching are evident here: the clarity of line, the confident economy of strokes, and the balance between open space and incised form all speak to his deep understanding of the medium’s expressive potential.

Etching requires precision, as each mark on the plate becomes part of the final image, and corrections are not easily made. Picasso, however, embraced this discipline as a strength. His lines—though deceptively simple—carry enormous weight, revealing character, mood, and psychological depth with minimal means. This is the essence of his etching mastery: the ability to strip away excess and arrive at pure expression through line alone.


Dora Maar was both Picasso’s lover and a crucial artistic collaborator during one of the most turbulent periods of his life, the era surrounding the Spanish Civil War and the creation of Guernica (1937). She embodied, for Picasso, both muse and intellectual equal, and her presence permeated his portraits of the late 1930s and early 1940s.

In Buste de Femme (Dora Maar), the abstracted features and angular forms capture not just Dora’s likeness but also her complex role in Picasso’s life: intense, enigmatic, and transformative. The fractured lines echo the sense of psychological fragmentation and tension that marked both their relationship and the historical moment.


Buste de Femme (Dora Maar), State I highlights Picasso’s extraordinary skill in etching, where his economy of line conveys both physical presence and inner complexity. By combining etching with aquatint, engraving, and scraper techniques, he demonstrates a command of intaglio printmaking that is both technical and expressive. The result is a portrait that transcends likeness, embodying Dora Maar’s psychological intensity while showcasing Picasso’s genius for reducing form to its essence.

This work stands as a testament to Picasso’s position as not only a revolutionary painter but also one of the greatest etchers in the history of art, rivaling masters like Rembrandt and Goya in the expressive power of his prints.

For more information or to buy Buste de Femme (Dora Maar), State I by Pablo Picasso, contact our galleries using the form below.
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