Early photographs indicate that Picasso displayed his cardboard Guitar construction both as an independent object and as part of a larger still life assemblage that included paper and wood. A photograph of this arrangement was first reproduced in the avant-garde journal Les Soirées de Paris in November 1913. When Picasso disassembled this still life, he elected to save only Guitar and the curved tabletop he had created to go beneath it. He packed the two components together for storage, most likely in autumn 1916.

The rectangular inner body of Guitar, while shaped like a prefabricated box, was made by the artist; the tabletop on which it sits was cut from an industrially manufactured box. The cardboard Guitar’s variable modes of installation are characteristic of Picasso’s improvisatory, combinatory process between 1912 and 1914.

Gallery label from

Picasso: Guitars, 192-1914, February 13–June 6, 2011

Provenance Research Project

This work is included in the Provenance Research Project, which investigates the ownership history of works in MoMA's collection.

1912 - 1973, Pablo Picasso, Paris.

1973, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, acquired as gift from the artist.

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Provenance Research Project
The Museum of Modern Art
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New York, NY 10019

Medium Paperboard, paper, thread, string, twine, and coated wire
Dimensions 25 3/4 x 13 x 7 1/2" (65.4 x 33 x 19 cm)
Credit Gift of the artist
Object number 640.1973
Department Painting & Sculpture

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Pablo Picasso

Pablo Picasso

Spanish, 1881–1973 1251 works online

With these words, Picasso shed light on two central principles of his artistic production over nearly 80 years: his openness to a diverse range of styles, subject matters, and mediums, and his resistance to the notion that change in art necessarily corresponds to improvement or progress.

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