skip to main content

Picasso exhibition to open at National Gallery

An exhibition celebrating the life and work of Pablo Picasso will open on Thursday at the National Gallery of Ireland (stock image)
An exhibition celebrating the life and work of Pablo Picasso will open on Thursday at the National Gallery of Ireland (stock image)

A major exhibition celebrating the life and work of the artist Pablo Picasso will open on Thursday at the National Gallery of Ireland in Dublin.

Called 'Explore Picasso: From the Studio', the exhibition offers a new perspective on Picasso's life and work.

Born in Malaga in Spain in 1881, Pablo Picasso is one of the most celebrated artists on the global stage and is credited for transforming the language of art in the 20th century.

This new exhibition, curated in partnership with the Musée Picasso Paris, is a major monographic exhibition of his work, offering a rare glimpse in to various phases and aspects of his life.

A Picasso painting of a woman wearing a blue dress and hat with a gold background.
'Bust of a Woman with a Blue Hat'

Visitors can see various types of work, including paintings, paper sculptures, ceramics and photographic work.

Dr Caroline Campbell, Director of the National Gallery of Ireland, said the exhibition tells the story of an "amazing journey" from the late 19th century to the 1970s in the south of France.

"Picasso is an artist who never stops thinking, never stops experimenting, is always trying new forms and new ideas," she said, adding that she hopes the exhibition will "blow peoples' minds".

A woman with shoulder length blonde hair is wearing a bright pink suit with a white blouse. She is standing with her hands clasped in front of a pale grey stone building.
Dr Caroline Campbell said the exhibition tells the story of an "amazing journey"

For curator Janet McLean, the joy and challenge of curating Picasso's work is daunting.

"Picasso created about 150,000 works in his life time, so we have worked with the Museé in Paris to select works that we think will give our audience and visitors an access point to Picasso in his life," she said.

Picasso died in Mougins in the South of France in 1973 at the age of 91.

A Picasso painting of a woman with blonde hair wearing an orange and black vertical striped blouse against a blue background
'Portrait of Marie-Therese'

He had been an adventurous and prolific artist all his life and this exhibition aims to bring visitors on that far reaching journey.

"We are thrilled to be bringing the first major Picasso exhibition to Ireland," Ms McLean said.

"The first exhibition about Picasso in Ireland for 20 years and the only one to give an overview of his life, his work and his career, to show people why he is an important cultural figure."

A woman with shoulder length blonde hair is standing in front of a white wall with a colourful painting on it. She is wearing a white lacey blouse.
Janet McLean said Picasso "never rested on his laurels"

Dr Campbell added that when people think of Picasso, they think of Guernica.

"They know the name, but now they will see how he really was, finally," she said.

Ms McLean said she would like the exhibition to "show the human side" of Picasso and how he was endlessly committed to his art.

"He never rested on his laurels. He was always pushing himself to do more," she said.

A Picasso painting of artefacts and drawings
'The Studio at La Californie'

Ms McLean advised visitors not to be "scared" of Picasso and to instead think of her favourite quote from him.

"When he started making ceramics - in that first year in 1948 he made 1,000 ceramics - and when people said he was amazing, he said; 'No, I am just an ignoramus. I am just learning and I am not an expert'.

"He was always pushing himself."

The exhibition opens on Thursday and runs until 22 February 2026.