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Just some of the many
picasso prints and posters available
October 25, 1881 - April 8, 1973
Pablo Picasso
formally Pablo Ruiz Picasso , was one of
the recognized masters of 20th century art.
Overview
His name in full was Pablo (or Pablito) Diego Jose Santiago Francisco
de Paula Juan Nepomuceno Crispin Crispiniano de los Remedios Cipriano
de la Santisima Trinidad Ruiz Blasco y Picasso Lopez. His father was José
Ruiz y Blasco; his mother Maria Picasso y Lopez. In his early years he
signed his name Ruiz Blasco after his father, but decided to use his mother's
name from about 1901 on.
Picasso was born in Malaga, Spain and is
probably most famous as the founder, along with Georges Braque, of Cubism.
However in a long life he produced a wide and varied body of work, the
best-known being the Blue Period works which feature moving depictions
of acrobats, harlequins, prostitutes, beggars and artists.
A young Pablo PicassoWhile Picasso was primarily a painter (in fact he
believed that an artist must paint in order to be considered a true artist),
he also worked with small ceramic and bronze sculptures, collage and even
produced some poetry. "Je suis aussi un poète," as he
quipped to his friends.
Several paintings by Picasso rank among the
most expensive paintings in the world. On May 4, 2004 Picasso's painting
Garcon à la Pipe was sold for $104 million at Sotheby's, thus establishing
a new price record (see also List of most expensive paintings).
Picasso hated to be alone when he wasn't
working. In Paris, in addition to having a distinguished coterie of friends
in the Montmartre and Montparnasse Quarters, including Andre Breton, Guillaume
Apollinaire, writer Gertrude Stein and others, he usually maintained a
number of mistresses in addition to his wife or primary partner.
Picasso's most famous work is probably his
depiction of the German bombing of Guernica, Spain. This large canvas
embodies for many the inhumanity, brutality and hopelessness of war. The
painting of the picture was captured in a series of photographs by Picasso's
most famous lover, Dora Maar, a distinguished artist in her own right.
A Nazi officer is supposed to have come to his door brandishing a postcard
and demanding, "Did you do this?" "No," Picasso is
supposed to have replied, "you did." The Guernica hung in New
York's Museum of Modern Art for many years, but in 1992 became one of
the main attractions in Madrid's Museo de La Reina Sofia (Queen Sofia's
Museum) when it opened -- Picasso stipulated that the painting should
not return to Spain until democracy was restored in that country.
As certain works, for example the Cubist
pieces, tend to be associated in the public mind with Picasso, it is important
to realize how talented Picasso was as a painter and draughtsman. He was
capable of working with oils, watercolours, pastels, charcoal, pencil,
ink, or indeed any medium with equally high facility. With his most extreme
cubist works he came close to deconstructing a complex scene into just
a few geometric shapes while at the same time being capable of photo-realistic
pen and ink sketches of his friends. Picasso had a massive talent for
almost any artistic endeavor he turned his mind to, despite limited formal
academic training (he finished only one year of his course of study at
the Royal Academy in Madrid), and a ferocious work-ethic.
Early life
Picasso's father Don José Ruiz y Blasco was himself a painter and
for most of his life was a professor of art at Spanish colleges. It is
from Don José that Picasso learned the basics of formal academic
art training - figure drawing, and painting in oil. Although Picasso attended
art schools thoughout his childhood, often those his father taught at,
he never finished his college level course of study at the Royal Academy
of San Fernando in Madrid, leaving after less than a year.
The Picasso Museum in Barcelona features
many of Picasso's early works, created while he was living in Spain, as
well as the extensive collection of Jaime Sabartés, Picasso's close
friend from his Barcelona days, and for many years, Picasso's personal
secretary. There are many precise and detailed figure studies done in
his youth under his father's tutelage that clearly demonstrate his firm
grounding in classical techniques, as well as rarely seen works from his
old age.
Picasso and pacifism
It is true that Picasso remained neutral during the Spanish Civil War,
World War I and World War II, refusing to fight for any side or country.
Picasso never commented on this but encouraged the idea that it was because
he was a pacifist. Some of his contemporaries though (including Braque)
felt that this neutrality had more to do with cowardice than principle.
As a Spanish citizen living in France, Picasso
was under no compulsion to fight against the invading Germans in either
world war. In the Spanish Civil War, service for Spaniards living abroad
was optional and would have involved a voluntary return to the country
to join either side. While Picasso expressed anger and condemnation of
Franco and the Fascists through his art he did not take up arms against
them.
He also remained aloof from the Catalan independence
movement during his youth despite expressing general support and being
friendly with activists within it. No political movement seemed to compel
his support to any great degree.
After the Second World War, Picasso joined
the French Communist party, and even attended an international peace conference
in Poland. But party criticism of a portrait of Stalin as insufficiently
realistic cooled Picasso's interest in Communist politics.
Personal life
Picasso had a long string of lovers, four children by three women, and
two wives. In the early years of the 20th century, Picasso, still a struggling
youth, began a long term relationship with Fernande Olivier. It is she
who appears in many of the Blue and Rose period paintings. After garnering
fame and some fortune, Picasso left Fernande for Marcelle Humbert, whom
Picasso called Eva. When it became clear that Eva was dying, Picasso left
her as well. Throughout his life, Picasso also frequented bordellos, and
had numerous affairs.
In 1918 Picasso married Olga Koklova, a ballerina
with Sergei Diaghilev's troupe. Olga introduced Picasso to high society,
formal dinner parties, and all the social niceties attendant on the life
of the rich in 1920s Paris. The two had a son, Paulo, who would grow up
to be a sometime motorcycle racer, sometime chauffeur to his father, and
dissolute.
Olga's insistence on social propriety clashed
with Picasso's bohemian tendencies, and the two lived in a state of near
constant conflict. In 1927 Picasso met the then underage (17) Marie Thérèse
Walter, and began a secret affair with her. Picasso's marriage to Olga
soon ended in separation, as French law required an even division of property
in the case of divorce, and Picasso did not want Olga to have half his
wealth. The two remained legally married until Olga's death in 1955.
Picasso carried on a long standing affair
with Marie Thérèse, and fathered a daughter, Maya, with
her. Marie Thérèse lived in the vain hope that Picasso would
one day marry her, and eventually hanged herself after Picasso's death.
The photographer and painter Dora Maar was
also a constant companion and lover of Picasso. The two were closest in
the late 30s and early 40s, and it was Dora who documented the painting
of Guernica. Like all the women in his life, Dora was cruelly abused emotionally
by the narcissistic Picasso.
After the liberation of Paris in 1944, Picasso
began to keep company with a young art student, Françoise Gilot.
The two eventually became lovers, and had two children together, Claude,
and Paloma. Uniquely among Picasso's women, Françoise eventually
left Picasso in 1953 because of his abusive treatment, and infidelities.
This came as a severe blow to Picasso, who was used to submissive women
who lived for whatever scraps of affection or attention he deigned to
give them.
He went through a difficult period after
Françoise's departure, coming to terms with his advancing age,
and his perception that he was an old man, now in his seventies, who was
no longer attractive, but rather grotesque to young women. A number of
ink drawings from this period explore this theme of the hideous old dwarf
as buffoonish counterpoint to the beautiful young girl.
Picasso was not long in finding another lover,
Jacqueline Roque. Jacqueline worked at the Madoura Pottery, where Picasso
made and painted ceramics. The two remained together for the rest of Picasso's
life, marrying in 1961. Their marriage was also the means of one last
act of revenge against Françoise. Françoise had been seeking
a legal means to legitimize her children with Picasso, Claude and Paloma.
With Picasso's encouragement, she had arranged to divorce her then husband,
Luc Simon, and marry Picasso to secure her children's rights. Picasso
then secretly married Jacqueline after Françoise had filed for
divorce in order to exact his revenge for her leaving him.
Later works
Painting by PicassoIn his 80s and 90s, Picasso, no longer quite the energetic
dynamo he had been in his youth, became more, and more reclusive. His
second wife, Jacqueline Roque, screened all but the most important visitors,
and closest friends, even excluding Picasso's two children, Claude and
Paloma, both by his former partner, the painter, Françoise Gilot.
This reclusive existence intensified after
Picasso underwent surgery for a prostate condition in 1965. This surgery
is rumored to have left Picasso largely impotent. To a man for whom sexual
adventure was such an important part of life, this was a serious life
change, and Picasso seems to have dealt with it by redoubling his already
prolific artistic output.
Devoting his full energies to his work, Picasso
became more daring, his works more colorful and expressive, and from 1968
through 1971 he produced a torrent of paintings and hundreds of copperplate
engravings. At the time these works were dismissed by most as pornographic
fantasies of an impotent old man, or the slapdash works of an artist who
was past his prime. One long time admirer, Douglas Cooper called them
"the incoherent scribblings of a frenetic old man in the antechamber
of death." Only a decade later, after Picasso's death, when the rest
of the art world had moved on from abstract expressionism, did the critical
community come to see that Picasso had already discovered neo-espressionism,
and was, as usual, ahead of his time.
Pablo Picasso died on April 8, 1973 at Mougins,
France, and was interred at Castle Vauvenargues' park, in Vauvenargues,
Bouches-du-Rhône. Jacqueline prevented his children, Claude and
Paloma from attending the funeral.
At the time of his death, Picasso, by now
a multi millionaire, owned a vast quantity of his own work, consisting
of personal favorites which he had kept off the art market, or which he
had not needed to sell. In addition, Picasso had a considerable collection
of the work of other famous artists, some his contemporaries, like Henri
Matisse, with whom he had exchanged works. Since Picasso left no will,
his death duties, or estate tax to the French state were paid in the form
of his works, and others from his collection. These works form the core
of the immense, and representative collection of the Musée Picasso
in Paris. And recently in 2003, relatives of Picasso inaugurated a museum
dedicated to him, in his hometown of Malaga, Spain, called the Museo Picasso
Málaga.
In 1999, Picasso's Les Noces de Pierrette
(The Marriage of Pierrette) sold for more than $51 million USD.
What can be said that hasn't be said before?
A perfect draughtsman who abandoned simple vsiual perfaction to explore
vision, art, life in all it's horrors. A self-publicising womaniser, but
a genius never the less. And now his name is used to sell cars, it's a
funny world.
This article is licensed under
the GNU Free Documentation
License. It uses material from the Wikipedia
article "Picasso".
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