ArtCult : News of the art market .
Find in the whole site :
  Home
  News
  Features
  Experts tools
  Communication
  Une question ?
Recherche
Find in page Biographies :
Find in the whole site :

Actuellement
Latest Ads
27/06: A MAN NOT TO BE TRUSTED
A man by the name of Oscar Oleg (alproofing75@gmail.com ) has been asking artcult ...
07/03: LOOKING FOR MISSING PIECES
URGENTLY LOOKING FOR THE FOLLOWING MISSING PIECES SINCE FEBRUARY 3, 20161) Fauv...
05/01: MR ROBINSON'S DEC 6, 2014 FORGOTTEN RAMPAGE
On December 6, 2014 Mr David Robinson of Pacific Grove (CA) visited the Au Temps Jadis ...
> Post an ad
Online estimate
Send us a photography and a description and questions, and we will return our point of view.
Sumit estimate

Newsletter
Type in your email to subscribe to our newsletter

Biographies

Page précédente 87/165
Retour
PICASSO: THE GREATEST MASTER IN THE HISTORY OF ART

Cet article se compose de 8 pages.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
In Vallauris, he also produced numerous ceramic pieces including a Centaur made in 1948 and later cast in bronze.

In 1950 Picasso made the sculpture of a goat with a pierced basket, a nailed wood plank, ceramic jars, a can, barbed wire and a paddle assembled with plaster which was produced as a unique bronze sculpture two years later. The artist also realised paper and cardboard sculptures after 1960.

Most interesting is his incredible painted work. Picasso was already awarded a prize during the National Fine Art exhibition of Madrid in 1897 and a gold medal at the Provincial Exhibition of Malaga. In 1899 he managed to free himself from classical influences and his admiration for Goya and El Greco. He had also been impressed by the works of Manet, Van Gogh and Gauguin.

The 1900-1903 years correspond to his Blue period when he discovered Degas, Vuillard and Toulouse-Lautrec. He lived then in misery and his paintings somewhat recall his sufferings as a penniless Spanish immigrant discovering Paris.

His Rose (pink) period dates from the 1904-1906 years when he expressed more hope regarding his future. He no longer painted tramps and ill children but young showmen in carnival costumes and acrobats with some kind of Lautrec's touch. Meanwhile the year 1904 saw the emergence of Fauvism and Expressionism and these movements partly paved the way to Cubism and Abstraction.

At the end of 1906, Picasso became fascinated by African (primitive) art after he had seen some masks and statues in Derain's studio. A year later and after several preliminary studies he painted the “Demoiselles d'Avignon” which was seen as heralding Cubism though this work was more in line with those of the “Die Brucke” movement which was blossoming at the same time in Germany.

The main novelty in this painting was the fragmenting of female bodies seen under various angles. In fact art critics really spoke of “cubes” when they saw Georges Braque's “Houses in l'Estaque” (1908) and some landscapes this artist had painted in 1909 in La Roche-Guyon.

After the Demoiselles d'Avignon Picasso painted figures and still lifes which were reminiscent of those produced by Cézanne and it was only in 1909, in his landscapes of la Horta del Ebro, that he suggested cubes in the manner of Braque. His only other painting that represented a hint to a forthcoming passage to Cubism was the “Family of Harlequins” of 1908.

It was only from 1910 that Braque and Picasso intensified their pursuit of Cubism, first with analytic Cubism, the deepness of their works being reduced to that of a bas-relief, the drawing structuring them with few colours in grey and ochre tones and with the identification of objects being suppressed as if they were seen as fragmented through a crystal prism.

Mentions légales Conditions d'utilisation Rédaction Annonceurs Plan du site
Login : Password ArtCult - Made by Adrian Darmon