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PICASSO: THE GREATEST MASTER IN THE HISTORY OF ART

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For the first time reality in painting was being transformed into an abstract idea especially when Picasso and Braque painted still lifes. However Picasso did not hesitate to represent human portraits in such a way notably through the portraits of Ambroise Vollard and H. Kahnweiler in 1910.

In 1911, Picasso turned his back on austerity and used vivid colours in his Cubist works when he applied thick patches and dots on his canvasses.

A year later, following Braque's example, he produced works with glued pieces of paper, representations of letters, words, newspaper cuttings, wood imitation, tobacco packs and numbers as well as real objects during his stay in Sorgues. From then on painting became itself an object and such integration of objects in works appeared as a refusal to let analytic Cubism stray towards total abstraction. In 1913-1914, Picasso produced his first assembled sculptures prolonging the process of integrating objects in his works.

The outbreak of the First World War disrupted many modern movements and affected the development of Cubism. Picasso found himself isolated and started to paint synthetic works that showed a modification of his style. He only kept stylistic cubist elements and chose to apply more colours in his paintings, which he treated in a rather Expressionist manner. This led to more freedom in his themes and style.

In 1917 he switched back to some kind of realism while working on “Ballet Parade” whereas Surrealism was emerging. Then followed his antique or neo-classical period where the influence of Ingres seemed to be much present, notably during the early 1920's when Picasso painted nudes inspired by antique Roman statues after his visit to Rome as well as a series of Maternity paintings which followed the birth of his son. Still he produced in 1921 the “Three Musicians” inspired by an early work by Henri Hayden and the “Three Masks”, both works being regarded as being among his most important Cubist paintings.

Following his discovery of Italian Renaissance works he realised a series of Harlequins in 1923 and painted many big still lifes, some reinvented Cubist works, which were exhibited by Paul Rosenberg in 1926.

He then frequented Surrealist artists to whose principles he was somewhat attached and worked in their manner painting mainly monstrous deformed female bodies in a sadistic way while in Dinard from 1925 until 1928. These probably exhaled his mood towards Olga and other women as well as his sexual obsessions or simply his anguish at that time.

During the following years he instilled some kind of romanticism and softness when he painted the portraits of Marie-Thérèse Walter.

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