




| Artist | Pablo Picasso |
| Year | 1960 |
| Exhibition | La Tauromaquia — Galerie Lucie Weill, Paris |
| Printer | Jacomet, Paris |
| Reference | Rodrigo n° 102 — Edition of 400 |
| Size | 44 × 57 cm (17.3 × 22.5 in) |
| Type | Original vintage lithographic exhibition poster |
| Backing | Freshly linen backed |
| Condition | A- — Overall Good |
This is an original lithographic poster created in 1960 by Pablo Picasso for the exhibition La Tauromaquia at the Galerie Lucie Weill in Paris — one of the most intimate and personal shows of Picasso's later career, dedicated to the bullfight, the great obsession of his life. For Picasso, the corrida was never merely sport: it was ritual, theatre, mythology — a confrontation between beauty and death that he returned to again and again across six decades of work, from his earliest Barcelonan sketches to his final linocuts. This poster distils that lifelong fascination into a single image.
Pablo Picasso (1881–1973), born in Málaga where the bullring was as central to childhood as the church, brought to the corrida an insider's eye and a poet's hand. The Galerie Lucie Weill was one of the Rive Gauche's most respected spaces for modern masters — a fitting stage for this deeply Spanish subject in the heart of Paris. Printed by Jacomet and catalogued as Rodrigo n°102, this poster belongs to a documented edition of 400 — a precise, well-referenced multiple that serious collectors can authenticate and place within Picasso's graphic oeuvre.
The poster has been freshly linen backed — the gold standard of vintage poster conservation — ensuring the piece is stable, flat, and ready for framing.
A collector's piece for those who know Picasso beyond the paintings — the corrida in ink, from the gallery that showed it best.