
Pablo Picasso
Signed in pencil
Sheet: 62.2 x 75.2 cm
This 1959 linocut by Pablo Picasso, Bacchanale au Hibou, exemplifies the artist’s late mastery of the linocut medium, where he fuses bold graphic invention with classical themes of revelry, sensuality, and myth. Executed in taupe and black, the print is a remarkable demonstration of how Picasso could take the seemingly restrictive process of linoleum cutting and elevate it into a medium of both monumental clarity and rhythmic complexity.
Linocut, with its reliance on carving directly into linoleum blocks, demands precision and decisiveness. Unlike etching or lithography, where tonal subtleties can be layered gradually, linocut thrives on stark contrasts and bold shapes. Here, Picasso uses the process to create a dynamic interplay of solid forms and intricate linework. The taupe background sets the stage for bold black contours and patterns, which structure the scene with an almost architectural sense of rhythm.
Picasso’s collaboration with printer Hidalgo Arnéra in Vallauris during this period led him to push the boundaries of the linocut medium, particularly through reduction techniques. In Bacchanale au Hibou, the combination of flat color fields with densely patterned linework creates a tension between decorative abstraction and figural clarity.
The composition is alive with movement and rhythm. A group of nude, reveling figures occupy the lower half of the print: a seated woman with clasped hands, a rotund man raising his arms in revelry, lovers embracing, and a dancer in acrobatic pose. Above them, sweeping bands of rhythmic linework dominate the background, creating a sense of energy and musicality that envelops the entire scene.
At the top of the image, an owl (hibou) perches on a ledge, observing the chaos below. This presence of the owl—often a symbol of wisdom and nocturnal watchfulness in classical mythology—adds an intriguing counterpoint, suggesting that revelry is always accompanied by observation, reflection, or even judgment.
The figures themselves are treated with a playful mixture of mass and caricature. Their rounded forms and exaggerated gestures speak to the raw physicality of the bacchanal, while the surrounding linear rhythms almost dissolve their boundaries, merging body and environment into a single ecstatic flow.
Bacchanale au Hibou demonstrates Picasso’s absolute command of linocut as both a graphic and expressive medium. By 1959, he had reinvented the process, turning what was once considered a utilitarian printmaking technique into a vehicle for modernist innovation. His manipulation of line is particularly notable: rather than using contour solely to define form, he transforms it into a structural force that unifies the composition. The striated patterns echo the rhythms of music and dance, mirroring the frenzied spirit of the bacchanal.
The interplay between flat color and intricate linear motifs also shows Picasso’s ability to balance economy with richness. Where earlier in his career he had used etching to convey density and texture, here he achieves equivalent vibrancy through the carving knife alone, making linocut a medium of painterly intensity.
The theme of the bacchanal had fascinated Picasso throughout his career, linking his work to both classical antiquity and the European artistic tradition of depicting revelry, from Titian to Poussin. In Bacchanale au Hibou, however, he reimagines this timeless subject through the stark modern language of linocut, combining myth with graphic abstraction.
The owl, often associated with the goddess Athena, may also be read as a personal symbol for Picasso, who frequently included owls in his ceramics and prints. Its calm, watchful gaze contrasts with the chaotic energy of the dancers, suggesting a duality between instinct and intellect, ecstasy and order.
Bacchanale au Hibou exemplifies Picasso’s late printmaking genius, where technical mastery and thematic richness converge. With only taupe and black, he creates a world of rhythm, sensuality, and symbolic tension. The print is both deeply rooted in classical tradition and thoroughly modern in its execution, affirming Picasso’s place as one of the greatest innovators of 20th-century printmaking.