In 1927–29 Pablo Picasso explored the theme of the studio in two works by the same title. The Studio of 1927–28 in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art, New York, presents an interesting contrast to the version of 1928 in the Peggy Guggenheim Collection. The chromatic variety and the formal and spatial complexity of the former are reduced to a bare minimum, creating a stark simplicity. The latter, instead, presents the vivid colors of Synthetic Cubism in a vast expanse of white.
Indeed, the painting in the Peggy Guggenheim Collection shows geometric, wire-like contours that define figures in the manner of Picasso’s wire sculptures of the same period. The figures—a sculpted bust (on the left) and a full-length painted portrait (on the right)—remain ambiguous. However, the bust on the left seems sentient, while gazing at the figure framed in yellow, which can also be interpreted as an artist or more likely a model. The right-hand figure could be a female, given the biomorphic shape mounted on a circle that inextricably confuses eyes, shoulders and breasts. However, the lower torso is resolved into a circle and an arrow, the biological symbol for male. Behind this figure stands a stylized version of a table draped in a red tablecloth, its black contours perhaps doubling for the figure’s arms.
The history of the painting is remarkable. Soon after its completion in 1928, Picasso reworked it substantially by reducing the chromatic variety and the complexity of the composition. The evolution of Picasso’s thinking was ahead of his paintbrush, and on completion he had progressed beyond the work and subsequently decided to go back to it. Indeed, in 1929 Picasso gave it to his dealer, the legendary Daniel H. Kahnweiler, and five years later asked to have it back, exchanging it with five other paintings.
While still in Picasso’s possession the painting was lent to the Museum of Modern Art in New York for two exhibitions organized by its director Alfred H. Barr: Picasso: 40 Years of His Art in 1939–40, and Masterpieces of Picasso in 1941. It seems that Picasso himself decided to keep the painting in America during the war, rather than to return it to Europe. This allowed Peggy Guggenheim to acquire it in 1942, as advised by her then-husband, the Surrealist artist Max Ernst. The painting hung in their East 61st Street home and later that same year was moved to Guggenheim’s museum-gallery Art of This Century. The U.S. painter Robert Motherwell, who had his first one-man exhibition at Art of This Century, wrote: “That painting was perhaps the most important influence on my life in those first ten years in New York. That incredible white... surely one of the most austere and powerful works since the height of Cubism... unquestionably one of the masterpieces of the 20th century”.
When Guggenheim closed her museum-gallery and decided to return to Europe, she brought the painting along with the rest of her collection to Venice and in 1948 exhibited it at the Biennale. It was then exhibited together with her collection in her home, Palazzo Venier dei Leoni, which became the Peggy Guggenheim Collection after her death in 1979.