Sorcerers from Bohemia Picasso's Saltimbanques
Pablo Picasso, Spain 1881–1973 / Le Repas frugal (The frugal meal) (from 'La Suite des Saltimbanques' series) 1904, printed 1913 / Etching and scraper on Van Gelder Zonen wove paper / 66 x 51cm / Purchased 2015 with funds from the Margaret Olley Art Trust through the QAGOMA Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Succession Picasso/Copyright Agency / View full image
When
27 Jan 2026 – 12 Feb 2027
Where
Queensland Art Gallery, Gallery 7 (Philip Bacon Galleries)
Admission
Free
About
'Sorcerers from Bohemia' evokes the free-spirited world of the travelling circus performers, or saltimbanques — the subject of Pablo Picasso’s first major body of work in printmaking.
'La Suite des Saltimbanques' is a series of 15 loosely related etchings and drypoints that mark a transitional moment in the young artist’s personal and artistic development. Created on the cusp of Picasso’s Blue (1901–04) and Rose (1904–06) periods, the works are intimately connected with his paintings and drawings of the same era, including the Gallery’s own La Belle Hollandaise of 1905.
On moving to Paris in 1904, 22-year-old Picasso encountered a bohemian crowd of acrobats, jugglers and street performers, whom he sketched as they rehearsed and socialised together. His early depictions focus on the vulnerability and poverty of these itinerant figures, whereas later works pay homage to their strong social bonds and the freedom of their creative lives. Appearing individually and in groups, Picasso’s saltimbanques vary widely in age and fulfil a variety of roles, from clown and friend to mother and king.
Ushering in a lifelong experimentation with printmaking, 'La Suite des Saltimbanques' offers extraordinary insights into Picasso’s formative artistic concerns and the social milieu he inhabited at the time. In these sensitive and sympathetic portraits, he conveys the heft of a body, the texture of hair, a playful pose or a tender gesture with remarkable economy and elegance of line, ennobling figures who ordinarily existed on the fringes of society.
Pablo Picasso, Spain 1881–1973 / Téte de Femme: Madeleine (from 'La Suite des Saltimbanques' series) 1905, printed 1913 / Etching on Japan paper / 48.6 x 33.3cm / Purchased 2022 with funds from the Henry and Amanda Bartlett Trust through the QAGOMA Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Succession Picasso/Copyright Agency / View full image
Pablo Picasso, Spain 1881–1973 / Au Cirque (At the circus) (from 'La Suite des Saltimbanques' series) 1905-6, printed 1913 / Drypoint on Japon laid paper / 48.6 x 33.3cm / Purchased 2019 with funds from the Henry and Amanda Bartlett Trust through the QAGOMA Foundation / Collection: Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art / © Succession Picasso/Copyright Agency / View full image