Girl with a Mandolin is an early example of
Analytic Cubism, a development within the Cubist movement by which objects were rendered as a series of geometric volumes, replacing the curved lines of nature with straight edges. The art historian David Cottington contrasts the legibility of
Girl with a Mandolin, in which the shape and features of Tellier can be clearly recognised, with Braque's
Woman with a Mandolin. The artist and art historian
John Golding similarly takes the contrast between the two as an indication that Picasso's "engagement with the image was much stronger ... and that his approach remained more volumetric". In a 2003 study of Picasso, Brigitte Leal, Christine Piot and Marie-Laure Bernadac called the painting "a decisive turning point" in Picasso's development from studying volumes towards studying
planes. The curator
William Rubin contrasted it with the works painted by Picasso in
Horta de Sant Joan, the Catalan village where he spent most of May–September 1909, in that it uses a shallower perspective, more painterly brushwork, and less severe transitions. The art critic
Leo Steinberg traces the work's "formal–representational syntax" to
Picasso's earlier study of African sculpture. Both Penrose and the classicist John Ferguson have compared its use of proportion to that of
ancient Greek architecture. The art historian
Paul Hayes Tucker has suggested that the painting's use of shape and light may have been inspired by the photographs Picasso took around Horta during the summer of 1909. A 1969 commentary for the
Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York City judged that the painting minimised the identity of its model to a much greater extent than Picasso's portraits of his male friends, and that more realism had been employed in rendering the mandolin than the human subject. Its author described the portrait as an exercise in applying Cubist principles to a painting in the manner of the
realist portraitist
Camille Corot. Rubin similarly suggests that Picasso may have been inspired by seeing an exhibition of Corot's work at the
Salon d'Automne art show of 1909. The art historian Timothy Hilton specifically names Corot's
Woman in a Toque with a Mandolin, shown at the 1909 , as a likely inspiration.
Rosalind Krauss writes that Picasso's style effects "the withdrawal of the tactile and carnal from the field of the visual", and that Picasso himself considered this a grave loss mandated by the logical principles of Cubism. Anna C. Chave writes that the positioning of the subject's hand near the
sound-hole of the mandolin "carries a mild
autoerotic suggestion", though concurs with Krauss that the painting represents Picasso's relegation of what the former calls the "carnal dimensions" of touch and depth away from the viewer's sight. The film scholar Noa Steimatsky interprets the instrument's sound-hole as an analogue of the human eye.
Iconicity versus abstraction Golding writes: Cottington describes the painting as "a stretching of
[iconicity] to its limit", rather than a complete abandonment of the concept in favour of abstraction. The cultural critic
R. Bruce Elder identifies certain ("anchoring points"), such as the subject's hands and elbow and the mandolin's face, within the composition. He uses these as evidence for the distance between the painting's visual form and the real-life forms on which it is based, as well as for Picasso's intention to ensure that the portrait's subject remained discernible. Golding suggests that, had Picasso continued work on the painting, it would have become more elaborate and more abstract, similar to the
Portrait of Ambroise Vollard he painted in the same year. Hilton similarly suggests that Picasso might have made the painting more dense, with more severe lines and less variation in colour. Penrose describes the painting as being composed through "the process of elimination of resemblance to the outer appearance", with
ambiguity as to whether the subject's right breast is nude or clothed, and as to whether the rectangular form to the right of her face is a shadow or intended to represent part of that face. He writes that it combines classical proportions with modernist conception, and that "the human form has rarely been dissolved and recreated with more consummate skill". Golding described it as "one of the most beautiful, lyrical and accessible of all Cubist paintings", while the art historian
T. J. Clark called it "the most ingenious of Picasso's portraits". == Exhibition and ownership history ==