LACMA

ShopMembershipMyLACMATickets
LACMA
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
5905 Wilshire Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90036
info@lacma.org
(323) 857-6000
Sign up to receive emails
Subscribe
© Museum Associates 2025

Museum Hours

Monday

11 am–6 pm

Tuesday

11 am–6 pm

Wednesday

Closed

Thursday

11 am–6 pm

Friday

11 am–8 pm

Saturday

10 am–7 pm

Sunday

10 am–7 pm

 

  • About LACMA
  • Jobs
  • Building LACMA
  • Host An Event
  • Unframed
  • Press
  • FAQs
  • Log in to MyLACMA
  • Privacy Policy
© Museum Associates 2025
Collections

Pablo Picasso
Bust of a Woman (Dora Maar)1941

On view:
Broad Contemporary Art Museum, floor 3
Cubist oil painting portrait of a seated woman, face split into blue and white halves, wearing a navy striped dress with a green brooch, against a gray background
Reverse of a canvas painting on a wooden stretcher, showing aged linen fabric with handwritten inscription along the top edge reading '4 Novembre 41,' with metal corner braces and paper labels visible.
Artist or Maker
Pablo Picasso
Spain, 1881-1973, active France
Title
Bust of a Woman (Dora Maar)
Place Made
France
Date Made
1941
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
32 × 25 1/2 in. (81.28 × 64.77 cm)
Credit Line
Partial, fractional and promised gift of Janice and Henri Lazarof
Accession Number
M.2005.70.106
Classification
Paintings
Collecting Area
Modern Art
Curatorial Notes

During the late 1930s, three of Picasso’s romantic relationships overlapped. He had been married to Olga Khokhlova, a Ukrainian ballet dancer, since 1918 and involved with Marie-Thérèse Walter since 1927. In 1935, while Walter was pregnant with their daughter, Maya, Picasso began an affair with Surrealist photographer and painter Dora Maar. He painted dozens of portraits of these women, each with their own set of coded characteristics. About his abusive treat- ment of women, Picasso’s and Khokhlova’s granddaughter Marina wrote: “He submitted them to his animal sexuality, tamed them, bewitched them, ingested them, and crushed them onto his canvas. . . once they were bled dry, he would dispose of them.”


Picasso frequently pictured Maar in distress, often isolated in a small room, as in Bust of a Seated Woman and Bust of a Woman (Dora Maar), to the right; he once claimed he could only ever imagine her crying, as he depicted her in Weeping Woman with Handkerchief (on view nearby). Maar resented this portrayal, asserting that “All [Picasso’s] portraits of me are lies. . . . Not one is Dora Maar.”


Wall label, 2021.

Provenance
The artist (1881-1973). [Louis Carré, Paris]; [Marlborough Fine Art, London]; Private collection; [Galerie Beyeler, Basel]; sold in 1995 to Janice and Henri Lazarof, Los Angeles; given in 2005 to LACMA.
Selected Bibliography
  • Zervos, Christian. Pablo Picasso. Paris: Cahiers d'Art, 1960. Catalogue raisonné, vol. 11, no. 347, p. 141, illustrated.