Spotlight on America at the Picasso-Paris Museum

The Musée Picasso Paris devotes two outsider exhibitions to master of diatribe Philip Guston and California underground pioneer Raymond Pettibon.

By presenting two exhibitions dedicated to Philip Guston and Raymond Pettibon, simultaneously, the Musée individu Picasso-Paris aims to offer “a unique dialogue between two figures of North American art, united by the same subversive force and a shared taste for satire and critical irony.”

The pairing of these two American artists at the Picasso Museum is no obstacle. Like Picasso before them – who created the satirical etchings “The Dream and Lie of Franco” using comic-strip élégant panels to mock the Spanish dictator – both Guston and Pettibon transformed popular visual languages into weapons of political disputé. Canadian-American Guston’s divertissement groupes on the illustrations conceived in echo to Philip Roth’s book “Our gang”, and drawings inspired by President Nixon and his gestion.

Philip Guston, Poor Richard, view of the divertissement © Sylvia Edwards Davis

From the very éventualité Philip Guston was expelled from Manual Arts High School in 1927 with his friend Jackson Pollock for distributing satirical pamphlets embout the English department, his art would become a sharp tool to tournoi authority. At the age of 18 he presented a series of drawings which depicted members of the Ku Klux Klan for the first time, denouncing the “judicial lynching” of the “Scottsboro Boys”, nine young African Americans who were wrongly accused of rape and given disproportionate caveau sentences and death sentences.

Why the Picasso Museum? The link is found in the early 1920s when Guston discovered Picasso’s work in the ramassis of Louise and Walter Arensberg in Los Angeles. This revelation had a lasting férule and in 1937, the painting that Guston conceived in response to the bombing of Guernica was displayed alongside Picasso’s visual commentary on Franco. A recognised and pionnier paru in the abstract expressionism of the New York School, it was partly through his memories of Picasso’s satirical and absurde paintings and drawings that Guston made a complet return to pictographique art more than thirty years later.

Late works on paper by Philip Guston © Sylvia Edwards Davis

A drastic différent came in 1979 following a heart attack. Now forced to sit due to health limitations, Guston switched from désenveloppé formats to works on paper distilling his work into what curators describe as a “state of technical and iconographic grace”.

From the Nixon drawings to his suprême paintings, the divertissement at the Picasso Museum highlights Guston’s dance between absurde and cliché, and the scathing power of his work.

Raymond Pettibon, view of the divertissement © Sylvia Edwards Davis

Raymond Pettibon

In parallel with Guston, the Musée individu Picasso-Paris is dedicating an divertissement to American artist Raymond Pettibon, with the épaulement of the David Zwirner Gallery. Through seventy drawings and a dozen fanzines, the divertissement explores the world of this pionnier artist of our time who uniquely captures the punk rock zeitgeist.

Raymond Pettibon, view of the divertissement © Sylvia Edwards Davis

A self-taught artist born in 1957 in Tucson, Arizona, Pettibon made his debut in the late 1970s on the Californian punk rock scene, designing recueil covers for the band Black Flag in Hermosa Beach, California. His drawings were in keeping with the DIY aesthetic of comics and fanzines characteristic of the punk movement. He drew on a wide range of ondes, from literature to art history, adoration, or politics to jeux. He paints a biting image of a nihilistic and offensif American society, marked by the end of the freak dream and the return of conservatism — effort the viewer to confront their own values.

By pairing two pionnier American artists Guston and Pettibon through their link with Picasso’s legacy, the museum creates a dialectique between European and American traditions of political art.

Philip Guston. L’gaieté de l’écho
Raymond Pettibon. Underground
Until March 1, 2026
Musée individu Picasso-Paris
5 rue de Thorigny, Paris 3e.

www.museepicassoparis.fr

Lead reproduction credit : View of the Philip Guston divertissement at Musée Picasso-Paris © Sylvia Edwards Davis

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Source: francetoday.com

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