Alfred Jarry (Laval, 1873-Paris, 1907) premiered the play Ubu rey on December 10, 1896 in Paris at solely 23 years outdated. The chronicles of the time communicate of laughter and insults. They weren’t conscious that the plump and delirious character that they had on stage, a picture of totalitarian despotism, would grow to be a consultant of the blackest humor and a literary icon of the primary order. The piece was carried out two afternoons. But the shortage of applause didn’t forestall the work from being acknowledged within the creative area as a parody of the Macbeth by William Shakespeare and to at the present time, within the midst of native and international political turbulence, Ubú continues to be very topical. The Picasso Museum in Barcelona opens this Wednesday Ubu painter. Alfred Jarry and the humanities (till April 5), an exhaustive creative investigation concerning the creator, the work that revolutionized creative Paris on the finish of the nineteenth century and its affect as a precursor of the theater of the absurd, Dadaism and surrealism.
Divided into 9 sections, the exhibition combines chronological and thematic order. Given a number of the publications wherein Jarry debuted as an artwork critic, the museum director and curator of the exhibition, Emmanuel Guigon (Morteau, France, 66 years outdated), explains the significance of Ubu as a personality. For him, it’s on the identical stage as Ulysses, Don Quixote or Madame Bovary. “Ubu has become a universal archetype,” he explains. “But, unlike his predecessors, the character surpasses all taboos. Since his first appearance in Now reyhis grotesque, disproportionate and comically cruel figure scandalized the public and paved the way for a modern myth. It symbolizes an unbridled word, an unleashed power and a provocative freedom, traits that Jarry even adopted in his own life as an extension of the character. “Ubú has established himself as a modern star, not without humor.”
Son of an upper-middle class family, Alfred Jarry was able to study in Paris although he did not graduate. The early death of his parents when he had just turned 20 allowed him to have money with which he could indulge his love of taverns and absinthe. It is said on the exhibition posters that his scattered life did not prevent him from producing a work as erudite as it was innovative in just 15 years (he died at 34 due to tuberculous meningitis). Thanks to his texts on art, he discovered artists then unknown and today undisputed masters such as Paul Gauguin, Pierre Bonnard, Armand Seguin or the Customs Officer, in whose house he settled when he ran out of all the inherited money. He also became friends with the nabis Paul Sérusier and Édouard Vuillard, as well as with Toulouse-Lautrec and Félix Vallotton, who would illustrate several of his works, such as The Almanac of Father Ubuwith images by Pierre Bonnard. All of these artists are profusely represented in the exhibition thanks to loans from museums such as the Pompidou and the Musée d’Orsay.
At the very beginning of the exhibition, which extends over two floors of the building, there is a photograph of Alfred Jarry pedaling a bicycle from which it is said that he was inseparable. Embedded in the sports print, a portrait of Jarry signed by the artist Hermann-Paul stands out in which he appears very young and serious. While putting the finishing touches on the assembly, the museum director says that he met Ubu rey when I was about 14 years old. “The affect was monumental. It is a really sturdy textual content. I’ve researched and labored so much on Jarry and his character.”
For the sake of this admiration, in 2000 he held a small exhibition about Ubú at the Valencian Institute of Modern Art and, as a great bibliophile, he has searched for and acquired every text linked to the author’s universe. “Periodically, exhibitions are dedicated to Jarry in many European cities,” but Guigon assures that this exhibition that opens in Barcelona is “the most ambitious.” Not only because of the amount of work on display, 489 objects including paintings, drawings, magazines and bibliophilia, but because it is the result of the most complete research so far carried out on the Ubú phenomenon and its author.
Surreal inspiration
One of the many chapters of the tour explains the popularity that Alfred Jarry achieved, despite the poor reception of Ubu rey. It was a posthumous recognition led by André Breton, who dedicated a conference to him in March 1918. Jarry then became an inspiration for the surrealists. Breton completed the operation of making him known by including him in his anthology of black humor in 1940. The exegesis of his work was taken care of by the College of Pataphysics, the society dedicated to the investigation of “imaginary solutions” for non-existent problems, among other things. In this area dedicated to surrealism, the spectacular oil painting by Max Ernst stands out. Now the emperor (1923), on loan from the Pompidou museum.
It is not known for certain whether Jarry and Picasso met in person, but there is no doubt that they knew about each other. Both are present in one of the most striking exhibition sections. It tells that six months after the outbreak of the Civil War, Picasso made a series of vignettes to accompany the Guernica in the Spanish pavilion at the 1937 Paris International Exhibition. It is a kind of comic in which Franco is evoked as a Christian knight in medieval armor. We see him “facing the sun”, like a tightrope walker in the trenches, with an excessive phallus or on the back of a pig. The commissioner assures that the comparison with Ubú is evident. The poet left a strong impression on the young Picasso since 1905. This fascination led him to illustrate Ubú, to collect his works and his engravings. It is said that Picasso kept Jarry’s revolver as a relic.
In the Catalan theaters
The exhibition closes with a succession of rooms in which the reception of Ubú in Catalonia is told, a fundamental chapter in its stage history. Since the first representation of Ubu king in 1964 at the Adrià Gual School of Dramatic Art—behind closed doors and documented by Pilar Aymerich—until the emblematic Mort del Merma Created by La Claca and Joan Miró, the character has inspired some of the most audacious theatrical proposals in the territory. In 1981, the Teatre Lliure consolidated this reception with Operation Ubuin collaboration with Els Joglars and with scenery by Fabià Puigserver, an adaptation that became a milestone on the contemporary Catalan scene for being a brilliant parody of the then president of the Generalitat, Jordi Pujol.
The farewell
Emmanuel Guigon has directed the Picasso Museum in Barcelona since 2016. The settlement with the City Council ends in 2026. In this decade, guests have multiplied and, most significantly for Guigon, the individuals of Barcelona have made a museum their very own that was a present from Picasso to the town. The exhibition that opens immediately will in all probability be the final one he indicators as director. For subsequent spring he has two tasks: The architect y Picasso and Mediterranean archeology. Happy and happy with the scientific and in style stage that the museum’s exhibitions have reached, the director prefers to not speak about future plans. He solely responds that he wish to keep on the museum till March to complete the work in progress after which proceed together with his publications and exhibitions.
https://elpais.com/cultura/2025-11-26/el-museo-piccaso-de-barcelona-recuerda-a-ubu-el-rey-totalitario-del-que-todos-se-rieron.html