
Pablo Picasso
Signed in Pencil
20.3 x 10.2 cm
This 1959 linocut by Pablo Picasso, Faune et Chévre, captures his late-career fascination with mythological subjects rendered through bold, graphic reduction. Printed on Arches paper, the work demonstrates how Picasso harnessed the linocut medium to achieve striking clarity of form and an immediacy that fuses ancient myth with modern simplicity.
By the late 1950s, Picasso had fully mastered linocut, transforming it from a relatively modest printmaking technique into a field of daring innovation. Unlike etching or lithography, linocut requires carving directly into a block of linoleum, producing sharp contrasts between positive and negative space. Here, the crisp black-and-white palette underscores the boldness of the composition, with the white areas cut away to reveal the essential forms of the faun, the flute, and the goat.
The choice of Arches paper, a fine French wove favored by Picasso, enhances the crispness of the impression and gives the linocut a tactile richness. The stark contrast between black and white allows the figures to stand out with almost sculptural intensity.
The scene presents a faun seated, playing a flute, while a goat rears up attentively before him. Both figures are distilled into simplified outlines, their forms reduced to essential gestures that remain instantly legible. The triangular framing—created by the slope of the faun’s flute and body against the angular backdrop—echoes the structural simplicity of archaic reliefs.
The faun, a recurring figure in Picasso’s oeuvre, represents sensuality, playfulness, and the blending of human and animal instincts. His posture is casual yet rhythmic, emphasizing his role as musician and seducer. The goat, equally emblematic in Picasso’s work, is depicted with animated liveliness, its raised stance suggesting both curiosity and reverence for the music.
Faune et Chévre reveals Picasso’s brilliance in using the linocut’s limitations to his advantage. The medium’s reliance on bold contours and absence of shading forces a focus on gesture and silhouette. Picasso exploits this to heighten the symbolic and timeless qualities of the scene. Each cut into the linoleum carries both economy and purpose, producing a composition that feels both ancient and modern, monumental and playful.
The simplicity of execution belies the sophistication of design. The triangular balance of the figures, the contrast of vertical and diagonal lines, and the rhythmic interplay of black and white all demonstrate his ability to orchestrate visual harmony within severe constraints.
During the 1950s, Picasso often revisited classical and mythological themes—fauns, satyrs, centaurs, and goats—figures that embodied vitality, eroticism, and the connection between art and nature. In this linocut, he reduces the mythological encounter to its purest essence, echoing both the simplicity of ancient Greek vase painting and the directness of modern graphic art.
The subject of the faun playing music also resonates with Picasso’s broader exploration of art as an act of creation, seduction, and ritual. The goat, long a personal and cultural symbol for him, often appeared in his paintings, sculptures, and ceramics as an emblem of fertility, vitality, and Mediterranean tradition.
Faune et Chévre (1959) is a superb example of Picasso’s late linocut practice, where mythological subjects are reimagined through modern graphic reduction. With bold contrasts and simplified forms, he transforms the faun and goat into timeless archetypes, capturing the vitality of myth in a composition that feels at once ancient and modern.
The work exemplifies how Picasso could take the most straightforward of printmaking techniques and elevate it into a powerful medium of poetic expression, reaffirming his status as one of the greatest printmakers of the 20th century.
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