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Pablo
Picasso was born on October 25, 1881, in Málaga, Spain. The son
of an academic painter, José Ruiz Blanco, Pablo Picasso began to
draw at an early age. In 1895, the family moved to Barcelona, and
Pablo Picasso studied there at La Lonja, the academy of fine arts.
His visit to Horta de Ebro from 1898 to 1899 and his association
with the group at the café Els Quatre Gats about 1899 were crucial
to his early artistic development. In 1900, Pablo Picasso’s first
exhibition took place in Barcelona, and that fall he went to Paris
for the first of several stays during the early years of the century.
Pablo Picasso settled in Paris in April 1904, and soon his circle
of friends included Guillaume Apollinaire, Max Jacob, Gertrude and
Leo Stein, as well as two dealers, Ambroise Vollard and Berthe Weill.
His style developed from the Blue Period (1901–04) to the Rose Period (1905) to the
pivotal work Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (1907), and the subsequent evolution of
Cubism [more] from an Analytic phase (ca. 1908–11), through its Synthetic phase
(beginning in 1912–13). Pablo Picasso’s collaboration on ballet and theatrical productions
began in 1916. Soon thereafter, his work was characterized by neoclassicism and
a renewed interest in drawing and figural representation. In the 1920s, the
artist and his wife, Olga (whom he had married in 1918), continued to live in
Paris, to travel frequently, and to spend their summers at the beach. From 1925
into the 1930s, Picasso was involved to a certain degree with the Surrealists, and
from the fall of 1931 he was especially interested in making sculpture. In 1932, with
large exhibitions at the Galeries Georges Petit, Paris, and the Kunsthaus Zürich, and
the publication of the first volume of Christian Zervos’s catalogue raisonné, Picasso’s
fame increased markedly.
By 1936, the Spanish Civil War had profoundly affected Pablo Picasso,
the expression of which culminated in his painting Guernica (1937,
Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid). Pablo Picasso’s
association with the Communist Party began in 1944. From the late
1940s, Pablo Picasso lived in the South of France. Among the enormous
number of Pablo Picasso exhibitions that were held during the artist’s
lifetime, those at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1939 and
the Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris, in 1955 were most significant.
In 1961, the artist married Jacqueline Roque, and they moved to
Mougins. There Picasso continued his prolific work in painting,
drawing, prints, ceramics, and sculpture until his death April 8,
1973.
"Yet Cubism and Modern art weren't either scientific or intellectual; they were visual and
came from the eye and mind of one of the greatest geniuses in art history. Pablo Picasso, born
in Spain, was a child prodigy who was recognized as such by his art-teacher father, who ably led
him along. The small Museo de Picasso in Barcelona is devoted primarily to his early works, which
include strikingly realistic renderings of casts of ancient sculpture.
"He was a rebel from the start and, as a teenager, began to frequent the Barcelona cafes where
intellectuals gathered. He soon went to Paris, the capital of art, and soaked up the works of
Manet, Gustave Courbet, and Toulouse-Lautrec, whose sketchy style impressed him greatly. Then
it was back to Spain, a return to France, and again back to Spain - all in the years 1899 to 1904.
"Before he struck upon Cubism, Pablo Picasso went through a prodigious number of styles - realism, caricature, the
Blue Period, and the Rose Period. The Blue Period dates from 1901 to 1904 and is characterized by a predominantly
blue palette and subjects focusing on outcasts, beggars, and prostitutes. This was when he also produced his
first sculptures. The most poignant work of the style is in Cleveland's Museum of Art, La Vie (1903), which
was created in memory of a great childhood friend, the Spanish poet Casagemas, who had committed suicide. The
painting started as a self-portrait, but Picasso's features became those of his lost friend. The composition
is stilted, the space compressed, the gestures stiff, and the tones predominantly blue. Another outstanding
Blue Period work, of 1903, is in the Metropolitan, The Blind Man's Meal. Yet another example, perhaps the
most lyrical and mysterious ever, is in the Toledo Museum of Art, the haunting Woman with a Crow (1903).
"The Rose Period began around 1904 when Picasso's palette brightened, the paintings dominated by pinks and
beiges, light blues, and roses. His subjects are saltimbanques (circus people), harlequins, and clowns, all
of whom seem to be mute and strangely inactive. One of the premier works of this period is in
Washington, D.C., the National Gallery's large and extremely beautiful Family of Saltimbanques
dating to 1905, which portrays a group of circus workers who appear alienated and incapable of
communicating with each other, set in a one-dimensional space.
"In 1905, Pablo Picasso went briefly to Holland, and on his return to Paris, his works took on a
classical aura with large male and fernale figures seen frontally or in distinct profile, almost
like early Greek art. One of the best of these of 1906 is inthe Albright-Knox Gallery in Buffalo,
NY, La Toilette. Several pieces in this new style were purchased by Gertrude (the art patron and writer) and
her brother, Leo Stein. The other major artist promoted by the Steins during this period was Henri Matisse, who
had made a sensation in an exhibition of 1905 for works of a most shocking new style, employing garish and
dissonant colors. These pieces would be derided by the critics as "Fauvism," a French word
for "wild beasts." Picasso was profoundly influenced by Matisse. He was also captivated by
the almost cartoon-like works of the self-taught "primitive" French painter Henri "Le Douanier" Rousseau,
whom he affectionately called "the last ancient Egyptian painter" because his works have a passing similarity
to the flat ancient Egyptian paintings.
"A masterpiece by Rousseau is in the Museum of Modern Art in New York, his world-famous Sleeping
Gypsy, with an incredible tiger gazing at the dormant figure with laser-like eyes.
"Picasso discovered ancient Iberian sculpture from Spain, African art (for he haunted the African
collections in the Musée d'Ethnographie du Trocadéro in Paris), and Gauguin's sculptures. Slowly, he
incorporated the simplified forms he found in these sources into a striking portrait of Gertrude Stein,
finished in 1906 and given by her in her will to the Metropolitan Museum. She has a severe masklike face
made up of emphatically hewn forms compressed inside a restricted space. (Stein is supposed to have
complained, "I don't look at all like that," with Picasso replying, "You will, Gertrude, you will.")
This unique portrait comes as a crucial shift from what Picasso saw to what he was thinking and paves the way to Cubism.
"Then came the awesome Les Demoiselles d'Avignon of 1907, the shaker
of the art world (Museum of Modern Art, New York). Picasso was a
little afraid of the painting and didn't show it except to a small
circle of friends until 1916, long after he had completed his early
Cubist pictures. Cubism is essentially the fragmenting of three-dimensional
forms into flat areas of pattern and color, overlapping and intertwining
so that shapes and parts of the human anatomy are seen from the
front and back at the same time. The style was created by Picasso
in tandem with his great friend Georges Braque, and at times, the
works were so alike it was hard for each artist quickly to identify
their own. Pablo Picasso died on April 8, 1973 in Mougin, France.
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