Weeping Woman I

Description

A ferocious image of grief, Weeping Woman I is one of the most powerful works that Pablo Picasso undertook in the wake of his seminal Guernica (1937; Museo del Prado, Madrid). After completing Guernica, an expression of the horrors of war and a critique of fascist tyranny, Picasso continued to be drawn to the subject of agonized grief. Between June and December 1937, he undertook a series of drawings, paintings, and prints known as The Weeping Women, in which he focused and elaborated on two figures first presented in Guernica. The figure in this print may also represent the artist’s lover, the Surrealist photographer Dora Maar. In Weeping Woman I, Picasso drew inspiration from contemporary events and sixteenth- and seventeenth-century religious imagery. He modernized the traditional theme of the Virgin Mary lamenting the death of her son. The importance Picasso accorded this etching is suggested not only by its size—it was the largest plate he had yet attempted—but also by the energy he invested in it. He developed the finished print through seven independent states. It seems that he felt the need to work and rework this image, perhaps in an effort to exorcise the demons of war and his difficult relationship with Maar.

Weeping Woman I

Pablo Picasso

July 1, 1937

Accession Number

135430

Medium

Drypoint, aquatint, and etching, with scraping, on copper in black on ivory laid paper

Dimensions

Plate: 69.5 × 49.7 cm (27 3/8 × 19 5/8 in.); Sheet: 77.4 × 56.8 cm (30 1/2 × 22 3/8 in.)

Classification

etching

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Through prior acquisition of the Martin A. Ryerson Collection with the assistance of the Noel and Florence Rothman Family and the Margaret Fisher Endowment

Background & Context

Background Story

Weeping Woman I is among the most powerful works Picasso created after completing his anti-war masterpiece Guernica (1937). Between June and December 1937, Picasso undertook a series of drawings, paintings, and prints known collectively as The Weeping Women, focusing on and elaborating two figures first seen in Guernica. The figure is widely believed to represent Dora Maar (1907–1997), Picasso's lover and a Surrealist photographer who documented the creation of Guernica through a series of remarkable photographs showing the painting's evolution.

Cultural Impact

By merging contemporary horror with classical religious tradition, Picasso universalized the specific tragedy of Guernica into a timeless image of grief. The Weeping Women series established the motif of the distorted, anguished face as a central vocabulary of 20th-century expressionism.

Why It Matters

The seven independent states through which Picasso developed this print suggest an obsessive need to work and rework the image — perhaps as an attempt to exorcise both the demons of war and the turbulence of his relationship with Dora Maar. The result is one of the most raw, unfiltered expressions of grief in Western art.