The Dream and Lie of Franco

The Dream and Lie of Franco, The second sheet
Artist Pablo Picasso
Year 1937
Type Etching and aquatint
Dimensions (12 7/16 in × 16 1/2 in)
Owner The Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Dream and Lie of Franco is a series of two sheets of prints, comprising 18 individual images, and an accompanying prose poem, by Pablo Picasso produced in 1937. The sheets each contain nine images arranged in a 3x3 grid. The first 14, in etching and aquatint, are dated 8 January 1937. The remaining four images were added to the second printing plate later, without use of aquatint, and dated June 7, 1937.[1][2][3]

The Dream and Lie of Franco is significant as Picasso's first overtly political work and prefigures his iconic political painting Guernica. The etchings satirise Spanish Generalísimo Francisco Franco's claim to represent and defend conservative Spanish culture and values by showing him in various ridiculous guises destroying Spain and its culture while the poem denounces "evil-omened polyps".[4] Three of the four images added in June 1937 are directly related to studies for Guernica.[1]

The individual images were originally intended to be published as postcards to raise funds for the Spanish Republican government, and sold at the Spanish Pavilion of the 1937 World's Fair, although it is unclear whether any prints were made or sold in postcard format.

In his review of the etchings for The Spectator in October 1937, art historian (and member of the Cambridge Five spy-ring) Anthony Blunt complained that the work could not "reach more than the limited coterie of aesthetes".[5] Critic and author John Golding on the other hand, claimed that "more than any other work by Picasso Dream and Lie of Franco breaks down, as the Surrealists so passionately longed to, distinctions between thought, writing and visual imagery."[6]

Images

The images form a sequence like those in a comic book and have a loose narrative:[1][2] Franco's form changes from panel to panel. The Spanish dictator's appearance has been likened by various writers to a "jackbooted phallus",[7] "an evil-omened polyp"[6] and "a grotesque homunculus with a head like a gesticulating and tuberous sweet potato".[8]

  1. Franco riding a horse waving a sword and a flag
  2. Franco, with a ridiculously large penis, waving a sword and a flag
  3. Franco attacking a classical sculpture with a pick
  4. Franco dressed as a courtesan with a flower and a fan
  5. Franco being gored by a bull
  6. Franco at prayer surrounded by barbed wire
  7. Franco on top of a dead creature
  8. Franco chasing a winged horse
  9. Franco riding on a pig carrying a spear
  10. Franco eating a dead horse
  11. The aftermath of a battle with a corpse
  12. The aftermath of a battle with a dead horse
  13. Franco and a bull
  14. Franco and the bull fighting

Additions to the second plate (including studies for Guernica):

  1. A woman crying and reaching up
  2. A woman fleeing a burning house carrying a child
  3. A woman cradling a child
  4. A woman shot with an arrow and reaching up amid devastation

Prose

References

  1. 1 2 3 The Metropolitan Museum of Art: Dream and Lie of Franco, 1937
  2. 1 2 National Gallery of Victoria: An Introduction to Guernica
  3. PBS: Picasso's commitment to the cause
  4. Michigan Today: Picasso's War
  5. Steiner, George (1987). "The Cleric of Treason". George Steiner: a reader. p. 179. ISBN 0195050681.
  6. 1 2 Golding, John (1994). Visions Of the Modern. p. 244. ISBN 0520087925.
  7. O'Brian, Patrick (2012). Picasso: A Biography. p. 318. ISBN 0007466382.
  8. van Hensbergen, Gijs (2013). Guernica: The Biography of a Twentieth-Century Icon. p. 28. ISBN 1408841487. Quote by Joaquín de la Puente
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