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Pablo Picasso Friendship , 1908 oil painting reproduction
Pablo Picasso Friendship , 1908 oil painting reproduction

Pablo Picasso Fruit in a Vase , 1909 oil painting reproduction
Pablo Picasso Fruit in a Vase , 1909 oil painting reproduction

Pablo Picasso Garçon à la pipe 1905 oil painting reproduction
Pablo Picasso Garçon à la pipe 1905 oil painting reproduction

Pablo Picasso Grande baigneuse au livre 18-February 1937 oil painting reproduction
Pablo Picasso Grande baigneuse au livre 18-February 1937 oil painting reproduction

Pablo Picasso Grandes têtes 16-March 1969 oil painting reproduction
Pablo Picasso Grandes têtes 16-March 1969 oil painting reproduction

Pablo Picasso Green Pan and Black Bottle , 1908 oil painting reproduction
Pablo Picasso Green Pan and Black Bottle , 1908 oil painting reproduction

Pablo Picasso Guitar and Violin , circa 1912 oil painting reproduction
Pablo Picasso Guitar and Violin , circa 1912 oil painting reproduction

Pablo Picasso Guitare et parition sur gueridon 1920 oil painting reproduction
Pablo Picasso Guitare et parition sur gueridon 1920 oil painting reproduction

Pablo Picasso Guitare 1920 oil painting reproduction
Pablo Picasso Guitare 1920 oil painting reproduction

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Pablo Picasso

(1881-1973)

Was born in Malaga, the son of an art teacher. The boy showed exceptional talent at an early age, and the artistic current flowing into Barcelona (where the family had settled) from France and Northern Europe stimulated him into trying out the personal languages of Munch, Toulouse-Lautrec, Renoir and other northerners. In 1900 Picasso visited Paris for a short time, and he returned in 1901 to join the cohort of young Bohemians attracted to the capital by the stimulating and exciting atmosphere then prevailing in the arts. Lautrec, Gauguin, van Gogh, late Impres&shy;sionism flit across his canvases in a bewildering medley and leave behind a passion for blue, which became the dominant color for his portrayal of the squalid tragedy of the Paris streets - the beggar, the harlot, the sick child, the hungry. Through this welter of contemporary influences ran the steady current of the things he had grown up with: the elongated forms of Catalan Gothic sculpture and Italian Mannerism, the simplified color and straightforward approach of Velizquez, Zurbarin and Goya. These also inform his oil paintings of actors, mountebanks and harlequins, where tender fawns and pinks replace the earlier drab and sad colors. Until then nothing unusual had transpired: even his interest in Iberian sculpture in 1906, and the radical simplification of form and color it led to, gave little hint of the position when the Fauve outbreak was at its height. Picasso took no part in this. Picasso was questioning the whole basis of painting and was therefore unable to follow still further the road from Impressionism to the dissolution of form and its translation into color and imaginative feeling.

The influence of Negro sculptures, which first appears in the Demoiselles, also fitted in with his quest for the expression of form and helped, by the bizarre nature of their forms, to release him from the tyranny of the representational tradition in art. In 1907 he met Braque, who had drifted into the Fauve circle and out of it again, and by 1909 they found that they faced the same problems and were striving to solve them in the same way. Both rejected decorative arabesques and bright, sensuous color and were striving to devise a pictorial language which would define volumes and their relationships without destroying the flat surface of the picture, and without descending to the imitation of accidental and superficial appearances. Together they evolved what is now called Analytical Cubism.

By 1912, color had begun to creep back among the grays, olive greens and drab browns, and actual objects - a piece of cane seating, a newspaper heading - were imported so as to stress by their complaisant acquiescence in becoming an element in a design the modest role of Nature in the Ideal, and also to serve as an example of the way in which nature may be re-created.

No man has changed more radically the nature of art. Like Giotto, Michel&shy;angelo and Bernini he stands at the beginning of a new epoch. Most museums of modern art throughout the world have examples of his oil paintings, prints, sculpture or ceramics.

Picasso’s famous oil paintings include:

  • Portrait of J.R. with Roses
  • Dawn Serenade
  • Head of a Woman and Stars
  • Les Demoiselles D'Avignon
  • Self-Portrait
  • Man with a Pipe
  • The Aficionado
  • Woman in an Armchair
  • Pierrot
  • Three Musicians
  • Three Women at the Spring
  • Mother and Child
  • Sleeping Nude
  • Woman with a Mandolin
  • Seated Bather
  • Pitcher and a Bowl of Fruit
  • Young Woman Drawing
  • Weeping Woman
  • Reclining Woman with a Cat
  • Woman with a Fan
  • Large Bather
  • Maternity
  • La Vie
  • Family of Saltimbanques
  • La Coiffure
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