
Still-Life with Lunch I
<p>Over a period of five years, Picasso worked with the printer Hildalgo Arnéra (1922–1927) to produce hundreds of linocuts with a printmaking process using a simple linoleum block, a common material in kitchen flooring. The printer described their working method: “Picasso worked at night; in the morning, Marcel the chauffeur brought what he had completed to the print shop with notes added by Jacqueline Roque [Picasso’s wife]. I pulled the proofs and returned them to [his home] La Californie at exactly 1:30.” This idiosyncratic procedure attests to the collaborative effort of Picasso’s printmaking ventures. <em>Still-Life with Lunch I</em> was created by printing one block of linoleum in several different colors. Known as the reduction method, the artist successively cuts away a linoleum block and the printer uses a different color ink at each stage.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1962
- Dimensions
- Block: 64.1 × 53 cm (25 1/4 × 20 7/8 in.); Sheet: 75.5 × 62.4 cm (29 3/4 × 24 5/8 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
More
More by this artist
Monument
1972 · Cor-Ten steel
Pirosmanachvili 1914
1972 · Illustrated book with one drypoint
At Work
1971 · Oil on canvas
La Célestine
1971 · Illustrated book with 66 etching and aquatints
Galerie Louise Leiris, Picasso
1971 · Lithograph
"Ecce Homo," after Rembrandt from Suite 156
1970 · Etching and aquatint
Record
Verified by WattsOS- Year
- 1962
- Dimensions
- Block: 64.1 × 53 cm (25 1/4 × 20 7/8 in.); Sheet: 75.5 × 62.4 cm (29 3/4 × 24 5/8 in.)
- Watts ID
- WW-1962-046694
Source
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified





