Showing posts with label Dora Maar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dora Maar. Show all posts

Sunday, January 16, 2011

Dora Maar's Photographs of Guernica

When asked what one of my favorite works of art to ever see in person is, I generally shock people by saying Pablo Picasso's Guernica. I had such a powerful reaction to this painting at the Reina Sofia in Madrid, I had to see it twice during my visit to Spain in 1995. I can't put it into words exactly but certainly the scale and the subject matter has something to do with it. I had the opportunity to see the Picasso exhibition at the Seattle Art Museum yesterday. Aside from the fact that there were very few opportunities to spend a lot of time next to the work (for fear of a panic attack with the thousands of people milling around the exhibition listening to audio devices), there was one thing that gave me chills: Dora Maar's photographs of the execution of Guernica.



Maar documented the progress of the mural over the course of several photographs. Below is how it was exhibited at SAM (via). I love the barely visible top left image where it resembles a study drawn on a chalk board. Seeing what parts were unveiled first and how that changed over the course of the series was fascinating. Of course I had the same view as this image (with people standing in front of me wherever I turned). In any case, I'll have to hunt down these images to study in a less crowded scenario.