Pablo Picasso
Three Dancers
1924
Scroll
Pablo Picasso
Three Dancers
1924
Physical Qualities
Pen and ink, Sheet: 356 × 495 mm. (14 × 19 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
The Cone Collection, formed by Dr. Claribel Cone and Miss Etta Cone of Baltimore, Maryland
Object Number
1950.12.493
In 1925 Picasso went to Monte Carlo where he attended a number of Ballets Russes performances. There he depicted dancers in a series of line drawings in the classical style. Their sentimental mood and the use of a spare style to outline the contours of the figures recalls the drawings of circus performers from 1905. The surety of Picasso's fluent draftsmanship contrasts with the casual poses taken by the young men, lost in dreamy detachment.
The Baltimore Museum of Art by bequest, 1950; Etta Cone, by purchase August 5, 1936; Galerie Rosengart, Lucerne by purchase; Galerie Thannhauser, Berlin, 1933 (per Rosengart archives)
Picasso and the Stage
Pablo Picasso between Cubism and Classicism: 1915-1925
Brenda Richardson, "Dr Claribel and Miss Etta: The Cone Collection of The Baltimore Museum of Art," 1985, p. 198.
Christian Zervos, Pablo Picasso, vol. 5 (ouevres de 1923 a 1925), Paris: Editions Cahiers d'Art, 1952, pl. 437.
Christian Zervos, Dessins de Picasso, Paris: Editions Cahiers d'Art, 1949, p. 64, no. 91.
"Selections from the Cone Collection," BMA News, vol. XIII, number 1 (October 1949), p. 28 (illus).
Sergio Solmi, Pablo Picasso, Milan: 1945, pl. 28.
Arts and Architecture, vol. 73, p. 8.
Inscribed: upper right in black ink: "Picasso/25"
