This NY Times article alerted me to Picasso’s last work in oil - Étreinte (1972). It’s part of a travelling show (Picasso: Mosqueteros – late paintings and etchings) currently at the Gagosian Gallery in New York.
As the NY Times article says, “Picasso, as usual, painted for his life”, and in this work there’s a level of disarray and possibly even panic at the realisation that this extraordinary life would not continue forever. (Picasso died in 1973, just 10 months after making the work.)

Pablo Picasso
Étreinte (The Embrace) 1972
Oil on canvas
Picasso also said (again, according to the NY Times article) “unless your picture goes wrong, it will be no good” and there’s a sense here of the man, as always, pushing the limits of what art is understood to be, prepared to take big risks.
There’s also a great NY Times slideshow on the exhibition (audio by Roberta Smith): A Staggering Final Act.
And a comment from the German Atlantic Times on Étreinte:
Blue and rose were the fundamental keys of his art. The playful “rose period” represented the blush of life, while the “blue period” was more melancholic, representing death. Their bodies entwine in the height of passion, their body parts a jumble. A blue wave of death is approaching the couple. The curtain falls. The game is over. The background is white nothingness. But at the same time this painting is the epitome of cubism’s modern perspective.





