
The Revolution of the Gaze
Cubismthe world in facets
Picasso, Braque, Gris, Gleizes, Blanchard, Léger and Delaunay do not shatter reality: they invent new ways of building it upon a flat surface.
From Cézanne to Cubism: form, space, and point of view, called back into play.
A guitar appears frontally and in profile. A table straightens up to meet the surface of the painting. Printed letters, a piece of newspaper, and faux wood stand alongside traces of paint. Cubism replaces the illusionistic window with a space where multiple layers of information coexist.
This transformation is no mere taste for angles. Picasso and Braque sought to represent what we know of an object as much as what we see of it from a fixed vantage point. Their painting analyzes, displaces, and reassembles. It continually reminds us that the canvas is a material surface — cloth, paper, glue, pigment — and not a world one could step into.
How to read a cubist painting without a manual
Following the clues
A rosette suggests a guitar, an oval becomes a glass, a few letters evoke a newspaper. These fragments hold fast to the real.
Seeing several sides
The picture layers successive views. It is not a photographic perspective but an extended experience of the motif.
Sensing the shallow space
The planes overlap almost parallel to the canvas. Background and subject exchange their contours until they become difficult to separate.
Observe the matter
Faux wood, sand, newsprint, typography, and wallpaper remind us that the painting is also an object made in the real world.

Three shocks at the origin of a new language
Build Rather Than Imitate
Cézanne's landscapes and still lifes simplify volumes, subtly shift the viewpoints, and give every part of the canvas its own quiet solidity. His 1907 Paris retrospective leaves a deep mark on the young avant-garde. Braque subsequently works at L'Estaque, on the very sites where Cézanne had once painted.
The Mask and the Power of Form
In Paris, Picasso, Braque, and other artists discover African and Oceanian sculptures—often arrived in European collections through colonial channels. They take from them the stylization, the compact volumes, and the tension between mass and void, while largely ignoring their original contexts and functions.
Posters, Cafés, Newspapers
Cubism absorbs everyday life: shop signs, stencil letters, sheet music, bottles, playing cards, tobacco, and press headlines. The printed world enters the image and blurs the boundary between representation and real object.

From a private laboratory to an international movement
Picasso, Braque and the birth of a question
Picasso works on theDemoiselles d'Avignonwhile Braque simplifies the landscapes of L'Estaque. After their meeting in 1907, the two artists see each other regularly. In 1908, the critic Louis Vauxcelles describes Braque's landscapes with the word 'cubes'; the term gradually takes hold.
Decomposing Vision
Figures, instruments, and still lifes are broken into tight planes, painted in a typically narrow palette of grays, ochres, and browns. Picasso and Braque work in such close collaboration that some paintings seem to come from a single studio. Yet legible signs keep the image from tipping into full abstraction.
Cubism goes public
Metzinger, Gleizes, Le Fauconnier, Léger, Delaunay, and La Fresnaye exhibit at the major Parisian Salons — unlike Picasso and Braque, who show through the gallery of Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler. In 1912, Gleizes and Metzinger publishOn “Cubism”, the first major treatise of the movement.
Building with pieces of reality
Picasso introduces oilcloth into a still life; Braque invents his first collages. Forms grow broader, colors return, and the image is built up through assembly. Juan Gris carries this logic to a striking architectural clarity.
A grammar for the avant-gardes
The First World War interrupts the Picasso–Braque collaboration and scatters the groups. Yet the cubist procedures feed Futurism, Constructivism, Vorticism, Purism, design, sculpture, and abstraction. The movement ceases to be a tight circle and becomes a lasting resource.
Analytic or synthetic: two complementary operations
Analytic Cubism
It begins with a motif and breaks it down. The eye circles the volumes, while space stays compact and shallow.
- Restrained palette: grey, brown, ochre, black.
- A proliferation of small facets.
- Subject and background tightly interwoven.
- Scattered clues: string, moustache, f-hole, letters.
- Preferred subjects: portrait, guitar, violin, bottle.
Synthetic Cubism
He builds the image from simplified elements. A scrap of paper can become, at once, real material and a sign of an object.
- Broader, more legible forms.
- A return to bold, clear color.
- Collage, papier collé, faux bois, typography.
- A deliberate play between truth and illusion.
- Composition through assembly rather than fragmentation.
The guitar, the figure and the city transformed

Portrait of Picasso
Gris gathers the face, the jacket, the palette and the inscription into a pyramidal structure. The fragmentation remains subordinate to a remarkably legible construction.

The Man on the Balcony
The monumental figure articulates with the modern city. The planes shift the body without rendering it unrecognizable.

Femme aux phlox
Portrait, flowers and interior are caught within a single movement. Salon Cubism preserves colour and a decorative breadth.

La Tour Eiffel
The modern monument folds, doubles back on itself, and cuts through space. Delaunay soon steers Cubism toward a more luminous, rhythmic form of painting.
Cubism does not abolish reality: it reveals that an image is always a construction.
A classical perspective arranges the world from a single, unmoving eye. Cubism admits the duration of the gaze, the memory of the object, and the materiality of the support. This is why its guitars, glasses, and newspapers appear at once less lifelike and yet richer in information.
A Movement Larger Than the Picasso–Braque Duo
The Tactile Space
He co-develops Analytical Cubism with Picasso, introduces stenciled letters, faux-bois, and papier collé, and after the war pursues an autonomous body of work.
Continuous Invention
He turns Cubism into a laboratory open to painting, collage, sculpture, and assemblage, never settling durably into any single formula.
Architectural Clarity
His synthetic compositions organize forms, colors, and papers with luminous precision. There, structure often precedes the recognition of the motif.
A Singular Intensity
Linked to Parisian Cubism, she develops powerful figures and a dense, saturated color, then turns her language toward a more personal figuration.
Volume and the Machine
His cylinders, contrasts, and rhythms give Cubism a monumentality of its own, attentive to mechanical objects and the energy of the modern city.
Color in Motion
Starting from a cubist fragmentation of the city, he grants growing autonomy to chromatic contrasts and opens a path toward abstraction.

Four common myths to deconstruct
"Everything is made of cubes"
The name derives from a critical phrase, but the works also incorporate curves, cylinders, cones, letters, and irregular planes. The essential principle lies in the dismantling of the single viewpoint — not a mandatory geometry.
Cubism is not entirely abstract
Picasso, Braque, and Gris maintained close ties to the motif. A rope, a silhouette, a single word—each steadies the image. However fragmented the canvas may be, it remains a sophisticated interplay with representation.
"Picasso single-handedly invented Cubism."
The collaboration with Braque is fundamental. Cézanne offers a major source; Gris, Metzinger, Gleizes, Blanchard, Léger, Delaunay, and many others then go on to develop distinct solutions.
Collage Redefines the Definition of Art
A glued sheet of newspaper does not merely imitate reality: it is a fragment of it. By bringing ordinary materials into play with painting, Cubism paves the way for a decisive share of 20th-century art.
Choosing a Cubist Work for Your Interior
Cubism is particularly suited to interiors where one seeks a graphic presence. An analytical still life brings depth and sophistication without a dominant colour; a synthetic composition becomes a more vivid focal point; Delaunay infuses rhythm and energy.
To avoid a cluttered effect, echo a single secondary colour from the work in the fabrics or accessories. Let the frame converse with the lines: dark wood for brown palettes, slim black for colourful compositions, pale oak for collages.
| Mood | Recommended Work | Room | Harmonies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sober and intellectual | Analytical still life | Study, library | Walnut, leather, black metal |
| Graphic and warm | Juan Gris, synthetic collage | Living room, dining room | Oak, linen, ochre, terracotta |
| Dynamic and urban | Delaunay, Tour Eiffel | Entryway, main living room | White, cobalt, accent red |
| Figurative and structured | Gleizes, Blanchard, La Fresnaye | Bedroom, reception space | Velvet, light stone, brass |
The cubist and modern collections of the shop
First explore the movement as a whole, then compare the personal idioms: Gris's architecture, Delaunay's color, Gleizes's figures, Léger's volumes, or Cézanne's constructive legacy.
These collections have been verified in the Alpha Reproduction shop. They let you choose by artist, by movement, or by decorative impact.
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQ on Cubism in Painting
Qui a inventé le cubisme ?
Le cubisme naît principalement de la collaboration entre Pablo Picasso et Georges Braque à Paris, à partir de 1907. Cézanne joue un rôle préparatoire essentiel et de nombreux artistes — Juan Gris, Gleizes, Metzinger, Blanchard, Léger ou Delaunay — développent ensuite le mouvement.
Quelle différence entre cubisme analytique et cubisme synthétique ?
Le cubisme analytique décompose le motif en petites facettes et emploie souvent une palette sobre. Le cubisme synthétique reconstruit l’image avec des formes plus larges, des couleurs plus franches et des matériaux collés comme le papier journal ou le papier peint.
Pourquoi les cubistes représentaient-ils plusieurs points de vue ?
They refused to limit the object to the appearance offered by a single, still eye. By combining multiple viewpoints and several moments of observation, they pursued a more conceptual representation of form — a reminder that a painting is a construction.
Is Cubism an abstract art?
Not entirely. Even in the most difficult works to decipher, clues generally connect the image to a guitar, a figure, a table or a newspaper. Yet Cubism contributes decisively to the development of abstraction.
Why do we find so many guitars and newspapers in Cubist paintings?
Instruments offer curves, volumes and easily recognisable details. Newspapers introduce letters, textures and fragments of everyday life; pasted onto the canvas, they play both the role of real material and of visual sign.
Which cubist work to choose for a living room?
A still life by Juan Gris suits a warm, graphic interior. A composition by Delaunay brings more colour energy. For a more understated setting, choose an analytical palette of browns, greys and ochres, in a format proportionate to the wall.
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