The End of the Performance

The End of the Performance

The End of the Performance

Picasso arrived in Paris in autumn 1900 driven by aspirations of a vital and artistic nature, and inspired by many of the artists admired in Barcelona’s modernista circles such as Toulouse-Lautrec, Degas or Manet. Seduced by the bohemian atmosphere of cafés and cabarets, he would introduce its characters into his works, which became peopled with friends and acquaintances and the artists performing in the shows he frequented.
In "The End of the Performance" a Parisian vedette bows to the audience at the end of her act, wearing her red hair tied up in a bun, characteristic long gloves, a close-fitting dress and a wide choker. Picasso portrays an elegant performer, slender and delicate, a far cry from the grotesque images of cabaret singers rendered by Toulouse-Lautrec. The figure stands out against a vague setting that seems to represent an interior. The pastel is applied in long brushstrokes on the décor and on the woman’s dress and hair, giving the impression of a work quickly sketched, while a more compact application of paint to the areas of skin and the gloves affords the figure greater substance.
Special mention should be made of the blackness of the character’s eyes and eyebrows, and her red lips, features that give her a radiant expression and attract the attention of the viewer. Artists on stage, either performing or bowing to audiences, were popular motifs in the early twentieth century and as such were explored by masters like Degas, Steinlen and Toulouse-Lautrec.
The museum also owns "La diseuse" (MPB 4.276), a composition that resembles "The End of the Performance", and another portrait of a cabaret artist in charcoal on paper. The three works were purchased in 1932 by the Junta de Museus [Board of Museums] from private collector Lluís Plandiura and were added to the Sabartés donation when the Museu Picasso was founded.

The End of the Performance
Pastel on canvas

73 cm x 47 cm

Purchase Plandiura, 1932

MPB 4.270

The entire documentation process is, by definition, a work in progress. If you have additional information on this register or spot any errors, please send us your comments.
Collections
Exhibitions
  • 1955- "III Bienal Hispanoamericana de Arte". Palau de la Virreina, Barcelona (Espanya)
  • "Berthe Weill: galeriste de l'avant-garde parisienne"
  • 2024 - 2025- "De Montmartre a Montparnasse. Artistes catalans a París (1889 - 1914)". Museu Picasso, Barcelona, Barcelona (Espanya)
  • 2020-2021- "Picasso. Els Quaderns". Museu Picasso, Barcelona, Barcelona (Espanya)
  • 2019-2020- "Tocar el color. La renovació del pastel". Fundación MAPFRE- Casa Garriga i Nogués, Barcelona (Espanya)
  • 2018-2019- "Picasso descobreix París". Museu Picasso, Barcelona, Barcelona (Espanya)
  • 2017-2018- "Picasso / Lautrec". Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid (Espanya)
  • 2010-2011- "Picasso davant Degas". Museu Picasso, Barcelona, Barcelona (Espanya)
  • 2010- "Picasso Looks at Degas". The Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown (EUA)
  • 2007- "Barcelona & Modernity: Gaudí to Dalí (1868-1939)". The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Nova York (EUA)
  • 2006-2007- "Barcelona & Modernity: Gaudí to Dalí (1868-1939)". The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland (EUA)
  • 2002- "París - Barcelona, 1888-1937". Museu Picasso, Barcelona, Barcelona (Espanya)
  • 2001-2002- "París - Barcelona, 1888-1937". Galeries Nationales du Grand Palais, París (França)
  • 2000- "Steinlen i l'època del 1900". Museu Picasso, Barcelona, Barcelona (Espanya)
  • 1997-1998- "Picasso. La fàbrica de dibuixos, 1890-1904". Museu Picasso, Barcelona, Barcelona (Espanya)
  • 1996- "Les carnets de dessins de Picasso". Musée national Picasso-Paris, París (França)
  • 1978- "Picasso i els segells". Museu Picasso, Barcelona, Barcelona (Espanya)
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