
About
Picasso and Jacqueline Roque met in 1953, when he was 72 and she was 27. He brought her a single rose each day for six months until she finally agreed to date him. Picasso saw a resemblance between Jacqueline and the woman with the hookah in Eugène Delacroix’s The Women of Algiers that he found inspiring. In 1955, Picasso’s first wife Olga Koklova died, and he married Jacqueline in Vallauris in March 1961. Depicted in profile, here Jacqueline crouches with an elongated neck and sharpened facial features. She is depicted similarly in later portraits, such as the “Odalisques” series.
SKU: 5542
Creator: Pablo Picasso
Date: 1963
Original Medium: Linoleum cut printed in color on wove paper
Original Size: 21 x 15 1/4 in
Location: Detroit Institute of Arts
© Succession Picasso 2012
Jacqueline au Chapeau à Fleurs
by: Pablo Picasso
We Offer High Quality
Custom Framing
We use the highest quality wood in our modern shop to create custom frames, frame your print with precision-cut acid-free mat board, and mount it behind a UV-blocking semi-gloss plexiglass to protect your art from the sun, dust, pollution, heat, and humidity. Then we add finishing touches like a wall hanging mount, wall friendly bumpers and a protective backing.
Please note that the images of frames displayed here are meant to be representative of those used in our custom-framed products, but may not exactly match the ones in the actual products

We Offer High Quality
Custom Framing
We use the highest quality wood in our modern shop to create custom frames, frame your print with precision-cut acid-free mat board, and mount it behind a UV-blocking semi-gloss plexiglass to protect your art from the sun, dust, pollution, heat, and humidity. Then we add finishing touches like wall hanging mount, wall friendly bumpers and a protective backing.