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MoMA Observation–Ma Jolie by Pablo Picasso

The oil painting, named “Ma Jolie”, was created by Pablo Picasso in 1911-12, belonging to the category of his Cubist style by employing faceted forms, simplified geometric forms, interlocking planes and spacial ambiguity. The main purpose of the Cubism arts is to depict three-dimensional objects on 2-D surface. In this painting, Picasso, like what he did in his another art piece named “Woman with Pears”, challenged the convention of representation and the orthodoxy in paintings.

The composition of the woman strumming the guitar defines the space of the whole painting by being placed in the center. The silhouette and detailed structure of the woman, at the first sight, was confused and puzzled to me, but as the curiosity to know further about the artwork motivated me to step back at a certain distance from the artwork and ultimately identify the artwork through the clues contained in the painting, including lines constructing the fingers that was strumming on the strings of the guitar, a simplified representation of eyes, nose and mouth and a few parts of her body silhouettes formed by hard and heavy-weighted lines. The painting is patterned with colors such as brown, beige, grey, and white, which again characterized the typical manifestation of Cubist style. In addition, the color patterns help construct the values on the geometric shapes to provide a tilting and lighting direction for every 2-D shape and achieve the idea of compressed space.

What’s important, the painting is an avatar, as an embodiment of love, of Picasso’s lover Marcelle Humbert whose nickname is Ma Jolie, ‘the refrain of a popular song performance at a Parisian music hall Picasso frequented’ and being embellished and emphasized in stencil letters at the bottom of the painting. As I first looked at the color pattern that is overall dull, it was hard for me to make connections between love and the theme of the painting. Nevertheless, it could be Picasso’s way that approached the romantics in an extraordinary way through Cubist style, which is also what I like about the painting afterwards.

 

MoMA Photos Documentations: 

 

Sketchbook: 

Formal Response:

Yiting (Brianna) Zhang is currently enrolling in the BFA program at Parsons, declaring her major as Fashion Design. She was born in Shanghai, China in 1999, the year of which significant changes on financial development and city planning were happening in Shanghai. In this city combined with the antiquated and modern culture, she finished her middle school and first year of the high school education. Then she spent three years in New Jersey, living with her host families and finishing her high school study at Union Catholic High School that was located in Scotch Plains, NJ. Throughout the years living with her host mother who is also an artist, she has been influenced and inspired by her a lot with regard to relationship between nature and humans. Since the first time when she got to deal with the volume and stories fabrics can create and tell, she has decided to dive deeper into playing with fabrics and fashion. She is also looking towards the sustainability in the fashion industry when fashion production has become one of the biggest threats to the environment. Accordingly, she believe that fashion can be reformed in a better direction and it can make certain changes to the world. Over the past years, she have obtained diverse skills and qualities, including strong leadership, playing percussion instruments, Latin dance, and of course, skills regarding to her current major, Fashion design.

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