Intimate and never-before-seen photographs of Dora Maar, the subasta in Paris

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Dora Maar. ‘Self-Portrait at a Window’, c. 1935. Detail Succession Dora Maar

ArtCurial puts on sale, today and tomorrow, 750 images taken by this artist, muse and lover of Picasso

With his camera he immortalized the creative process of ‘Guernica’. In the preparatory sketches of her, she is ‘the crying woman’

The living room artcurial of paris will put up for auction today and tomorrow photographs of Dora Maar (1907-1997), muse and lover of Picasso. This is a mostly unpublished photographic collection, made up of some 400 batches (about 750 snapshots) that trace the career of this artist from the end of the 1920s to the end of the 1940s. The set comes from the Dora Succession Maar, who treasures it since his death.

Many of these images are personal and were taken during his years with the Surrealists in Paris from the 1920s to the late 1940s, including several by Picasso, including reporting the creation of his masterpiece, ‘Guernica ‘, as well as images of the artist at home, in his studio and relaxing with friends on the French Riviera. In one, the artist is seated in an armchair carved from the trunk of an olive tree.

Dora Maar. ‘Pablo Picasso in his armchair’, Mougins, summer 1936. Detail

Succession Dora Maar

Although Dora Maar spent nine years of her life with Picasso, she was also magnificently successful in creating her own independent and personal work, using a medium that Picasso never embraced: photography. As such, Dora Maar can be seen as one of the most original photographers of her time a true pioneer of the mid-20th century”, says Bruno Jaubert, director of the Department of Impressionist and Modern Art at Artcurial.

Through her photographs, Dora Maar explored themes that were important to her, from the surrealism to nude snapshots and still life images that he used to create his surreal collages. He also shows his attachment to the social reality of his time and the work commissioned by him. This collection also illustrates his admiration for Pablo Picasso, through portraits of the artist that have remained largely unknown until now.

Dora Maar. ‘The ‘Guernica’, in full creative process, in the workshop of the rue des Grands Augustins’, Paris, May-June 1937

Succession Dora Maar

Dora Maar has gone down in history for immortalizing the creative process of ‘Guernica’ with her camera. Picasso made numerous sketches and preparatory studies for the painting, which he captures on canvas from May 11, 1937. There are seven main figures: the bull, the horse, the dead soldier and four women: one with her dead son in her arms, another with her arms raised coming out of a burning house, another carrying a lamp in her hand and a fourth kneeling. Between the bull and the horse he painted a barely recognizable dove.

By then, Picasso had already ended his marriage to the Russian ballerina Olga Koklova -she did not want to get divorced- and had as a lover the very young Marie-Thérèse Walter , with whom he had a daughter, Maya. But in 1936 he met the young French photographer Dora Maar, who by then had her own photo studio. He was almost three decades older than her. Dora will be your model, muse and lover on those dates. It’s her ‘the crying woman’ that appears in many of the sketches of ‘Guernica’, but that ended up not being captured on the final canvas. He was a privileged witness to the process of creating the painting, which he immortalized in images.

Dora Maar. ‘Pablo Picasso under an umbrella’, Antibes, c. 1936-1937. Detail

Succession Dora Maar

Henriette Theodora Markovitch better known as Dora Maar (1907-1997), was painter, photographer and sculptor . His French mother owned a fashion boutique and his father was a Croatian architect. She was born in Paris, although raised in Argentina, she studied at the Academie Lothe, where she met the legendary photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson , a year younger than her. She began her career photographing fashion models and then moved on to advertising. She also worked as an actress in a movie. She was a close friend of André Breton and of Paul and Nusch Éluard whom he portrayed on many occasions.

The collection also includes self-portraits, nudes, as well as stark photographs of people with disabilities. After the war, Maar, who parted ways with Picasso in 1945 when he left her for the artist Françoise Gilot, briefly collapsed. She though she continued to paint until his death in 1997, aged 89 , his life was always overshadowed by Picasso. Dora Maar did not have children , so these negatives have been in his legacy files ever since he died. They were all taken with the Rolleiflex he used and cover 20 years of work. Although Picasso painted Maar many times, she was not impressed: “All [sus] pictures of me are lies. None is Dora Maar “, he said once.


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