The most recent issue of Tate Papers explores paintings hidden beneath 
paintings on the same canvas. The seven works examined here - three by Pablo 
Picasso and four by Francis Picabia - nearly all began life as different 
compositions and were repainted by the artist to create completely new images. 
Picasso's Nude Woman in a Red Armchair 1932 is the exception, painted very 
rapidly, possibly in a single day. Technical examination using X-radiography 
with ultraviolet and infrared imaging, infrared spectroscopy, pigment and 
medium analysis, and high-resolution microscopy as well as documentary evidence 
reveal these hidden images and help shed new light on the thought processes and 
techniques of these two artists.

http://www.tate.org.uk/research/publications/tate-papers/28

The articles, all by Annette King, Joyce H. Townsend and Bronwyn Ormsby, are: 
'Girl in a Chemise c.1905 by Pablo Picasso', 'The Three Dancers 1925 by Pablo 
Picasso', 'Nude Woman in a Red Armchair 1932 by Pablo Picasso', 'The Fig-Leaf 
1922 by Francis Picabia', 'The Handsome Pork-Butcher c.1924-6, c.1929-35 by 
Francis Picabia', 'Otaïti 1930 by Francis Picabia' and 'Portrait of a Doctor 
c.1935-1947, by Francis Picabia'.

The research for these papers was generously supported by the Clothworkers' 
Foundation. Tate Papers (ISSN 1753-9854) is a peer-reviewed research journal 
that publishes articles on British and modern international art, and on museum 
practice today. All articles are freely accessible online. Tate Papers allows 
reuse and remixing of its content in accordance with a CC BY-NC licence.

Luigi Galimberti
Collection Care Research Manager, Tate
www.tate.org.uk<http://www.tate.org.uk>


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