Biography of Picasso
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Biography of Picasso


Picasso at 23, rue de La Boétie, 1932 Pablo Picasso was born October 25, 1881, in Malaga, Spain, the son of Jose Ruiz Blasco, and art teacher, and Maria Picasso y Lopez. His talent was manifested early in his life-he was already painting by age 10, and by age 15, had gained admittance to Barcelona's School of Fine Arts. After two years, he transferred to a school in Madrid.

In 1901, after winning prizes for various works (Science and Charity, 1897, Customs of Aragon, 1898), Picasso set up a studio in Montmartre. Before this time, he had always been signings his paintings using both his mother's (Picasso) and father's (Ruiz) names but now he changed, and from 1901 on, he used only Picasso to sign art. By now, Picasso was a master of the traditional forms of art, and was employing the neo-Impressionist ideas of the schools of Degas, Vuillard, and Toulouse-Lautrec.

Picasso's Blue Period was from 1901-1904. This was a period of mourning for Picasso, over his dead friend, Casamegas, who had committed suicide over a lost lover. During this period of Picasso's painting, he used the color blue, in different shades, uniformly in all of his paintings, thus the name of the period. His paintings expressed human misery and sadness, and were dominated by blind figures, alchoholics, prostitutes, beggars, and the miserable. The period was culminated with the painting of La Vie, and was followed by the start of the Rose Period.

In the Rose Period(1904-1906), Picasso recovered from the misery of the blue period with bright colors, and happy subject matter. During this time, Picasso met Fernande Olivier, with whom he started a relationship. She would be his inspiration and model for many works in the coming years.

In the years to come, Picasso began a journey into what would eventually evolve into Cubism with the Protocubism movement. In Protocubism, Picasso destroyed spatial depth, and began making "flatter" looking images. This is illustrated in Portrait of Gertrude Stein, 1906, and in Self Portrait with Palette, 1906.

Picasso in Arles, 1961

Picasso's Analytic Cubism movement began in 1908, when he was inspired by the volumetric treatment of form by Cezanne. Along with French artist George Braque, Picasso painted in a style described by a critic as being made up of "little cubes". From this came the term, Cubism. In Analytic Cubism, Picasso and Braque were concerned with the breaking down and analysis of forms. They used mostly monichromatic schemes in their representations of radically fragmented scenes, showing several sides of the image simultaneously. An example of this is Houses on the Hill , 1909.

Picasso marked the change into the second stage of Cubism, Synthetic Cubism in 1912, with the creation of his first collage, Still Life with Clair Caning. This stage of Cubism was characterized by a wider usage of color and decoration, although shapes in the paintings remained flat and fragmented. Picasso also created several Cubist sculptures, like Head of a Woman, 1909,along with various constructions made from different materials.

During World War I, Picasso went to Rome, where he met his wife to be, Olga Kokhloven. During the early 1920's, Picasso created tranquil, neoclassical pictures featuring heavy figures, along with works inspired by mythology. In the early 1930's, Picasso met Marie Therese, who bore him a daughter, Maya, in 1935. Marie had an affect on some of Picasso's paintings during this time, lending to them sweeping curves and expressing an underlying eroticism. In 1935, Picasso produced a major work, Minotauromachy, which combined the imagery of a bullfight along with a minotaur; many call this mural the single most important work of the 20th century.

Minotauromachy, 1935

In 1937, Picasso was commisioned by the Spanish government to produce a mural about the Spanish Civil War. Picasso produced a rendition of the bombed out town of Guernica, in which he used symbols and imagery to portray the horrors of war. It is considered by many to be one of Picasso's most dominant and signifigant works.

During World War II, Picasso's works took on a more somber tone, featuring death many times as the main subject. Picasso spent most of this time in Paris, and after the war ended, he joined the Communist party.

As a special honor to him, on his 90th birthday, many of Picasso's works were displayed in the Louvre, Paris. This was the first time that a living artists works had been hung in the famous museum. During his later years, he worked with all manner of media to produce art, welding, and poetry. Working til the end, he produce dover 20,000 works during his lifetime. Pablo Picasso died on April 8, 1973, at the age of 92, in his villa near Mougins, France.


Pablo Picasso, 1881-1973



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