The Fall of Icarus 1958 by Pablo Picasso
The Fall Of Icarus
Picasso’s Final Myth: The Fall of Icarus in 1958
The final year of Pablo Picasso’s lithographic series on classical myths, The Fall of Icarus (1958) distills the artist’s lifelong obsession with metamorphosis and failure. Unlike his earlier, frenetic Cubist compositions, this work arrives in the twilight of his career—a period marked by reflection and economy of line. The print belongs to the Suite 156, a collection of 156 lithographs created between 1954 and 1968, where Picasso revisited themes from Ovid’s Metamorphoses through a lens of modernist abstraction. Here, the myth of Icarus—who flew too close to the sun on waxen wings—becomes a vehicle for Picasso’s own reckoning with artistic ambition and mortality.
The composition’s stark geometry and limited palette reflect Picasso’s late-career shift toward simplification. As the Museum of Modern Art observes, his post-war lithographs often stripped narratives to their essentials, using jagged lines and negative space to evoke both the ancient and the contemporary. In this rendering, Icarus’s plunge is suggested rather than depicted: a single, diagonal slash of black against a void. The absence of the sun—traditionally central to the myth—redirects focus to the fall itself, a choice that aligns with Picasso’s late-period preoccupation with absence and erosion. The print’s 30×40 cm dimensions further concentrate its impact, demanding close viewing to parse its sparse, symbolic language.
Late Picasso: Myth and Modernity in the 1950s
By 1958, Pablo Picasso had long since transcended the Cubist revolution he co-founded. The artist’s seventh decade was characterized by a return to classical themes, albeit filtered through a lifetime of formal experimentation. The Suite 156 lithographs, created in collaboration with master printer Hidalgo Arnéra, reveal Picasso’s dialogue with the past: he reinterpreted Ovid, Velázquez, and Rembrandt while embracing the immediacy of printmaking. This period also saw him working in near-isolation at his villa La Californie in Cannes, a setting that intensified his focus on existential themes.
The Fall of Icarus lithograph emerges from this context of introspection. Unlike his earlier, more chaotic depictions of the myth—such as the 1930 etching where Icarus’s body is entangled in a web of lines—this version reduces the narrative to a single, falling figure. The print’s economy mirrors Picasso’s late-style approach, which, as Tate Modern notes, often “paired technical virtuosity with a raw, almost childlike directness.” The absence of background detail forces the viewer to confront the figure’s descent as both a personal and universal metaphor, a strategy Picasso employed increasingly in his final decades.
In The Fall of Icarus, Picasso collapses time: the myth’s ancient origins meet the modernist grid, and the artist’s own aging hand guides the lithographic stone. The result is less a depiction of failure than a meditation on the inevitability of descent—whether literal or artistic.
Lithography and the Language of Reduction
Composition: The Void as Character
The lithograph’s power lies in its negative space. Picasso positions Icarus’s figure in the lower-right quadrant, leaving the upper-left empty—a reversal of traditional compositions that place action at the center. This asymmetry creates tension, as the eye searches for the missing sun or sea. The diagonal line of the falling figure cuts across the void, a device Picasso used to imply both movement and irrevocable separation. Unlike his Cubist works, where multiple perspectives fracture the plane, here the composition relies on absence to convey narrative weight.
Line and Texture: The Hand of the Master
Picasso’s lithographic technique in 1958 favored dry, granular marks over the fluid washes of his earlier prints. The texture of the stone is visible in the figure’s outline, where the artist’s pressure varies to suggest both the rigidity of Icarus’s wings and the softness of his collapsing body. The limited palette—black ink on white paper—heightens the contrast between the figure and the void, a choice that echoes the binary themes of ascent and fall. As with his ceramic works of the same period, Picasso exploits the medium’s constraints to distill form to its essence.
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Add to Cart — Ships FreeDisplaying The Fall of Icarus: A Study in Contrast
This lithograph’s stark monochrome and dynamic composition make it a focal point for modern interiors. The 30×40 cm (12×16") size suits both intimate and expansive spaces: try it above a minimalist console in a hallway, where its diagonal energy can guide the eye through a room, or as a counterpoint to organic textures in a living area. The print’s high-contrast palette pairs well with deep blues or warm terracottas—colors that echo the Mediterranean light of Picasso’s late-career home in the South of France. For a contemporary edge, frame it alongside geometric ceramics or raw-edged furniture to emphasize its modernist roots.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Yes, every print includes a custom gallery frame crafted from solid wood with an acid-free mat board. The framing is designed to archival standards, ensuring the artwork remains protected and presentation-ready for decades.
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We offer FREE shipping to all countries, with no minimum order. Delivery typically takes 5–10 business days, depending on your location. All prints are carefully packaged to arrive in pristine condition.
How long will the colors stay vibrant?
Our prints use archival inks and paper rated for 100+ years under museum conditions. Displayed away from direct sunlight, the lithograph’s contrast and detail will remain sharp for generations.
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We offer a 30-day return window for all orders. If you’re not completely satisfied, contact us for a full refund or exchange—no restocking fees.
Sources & Further Reading
- The Museum of Modern Art. "Pablo Picasso: Lithographs from the Suite 156." moma.org
- Tate. "Pablo Picasso: The Late Works." tate.org.uk
- The Art Story. "Picasso’s Printmaking: Innovation and Tradition." theartstory.org
More Works by Pablo Picasso
Explore Picasso’s evolving styles across four decades of printmaking, from Cubist still lifes to his late-career mythological series.
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