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PICASSO: THE GREATEST MASTER IN THE HISTORY OF ART

Cet article se compose de 8 pages.
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In 1952 he achieved two large panels representing War and Peace for a Chapel in Vallauris and in 1958 an important mural painting for the UNESCO headquarters in Paris.

From 1952 he painted many landscapes, still lifes and portraits, including those of Jacqueline Roque, his new companion. He also painted works after several famous masters such as Courbet, Delacroix and others.

In 1955 he started to paint a series of studios in Cannes after paying tribute to Matisse who had died the previous year. He then painted some 50 works after “Las Meninas” by Velazquez until 1958 and produced engravings on bullfights as well as 27 variations of “Le Déjeuner sur l'Herbe” by Manet produced in Mougins between 1959 and 1961.

Picasso then painted a series after the “Rape of the Sabines” by David and in 1963 a series of the Painter and his Model which he pursued until the end of his life and in which he showed his love and hatred of women.

From 1960 until his death he produced some 1,000 works and at 90 he still was full of energy though he tended to be quite repetitive and less creative in his production of musketeers, ironic self-portraits and erotic scenes.

There are two important poles in Picasso's career, the Analytic Cubist period of 1910-1913 and the Expressionist cubist period of Guernica in 1937. His period of pure Cubism, which went somewhat against his extrovert temperament, was brief. Most of his works were based on Expressionist Cubism (Synthetic Cubism) culminating with “Guernica” and which was present already in “Les Demoiselles d'Avignon”. Such form of painting served to illustrate his passions, his emotions as well as what he admired and loathed throughout his life.

Picasso was called a half god as he created an entire new artistic world in addition to being with Braque the inventor of Cubism, one of the greatest revolutions in art.

He was unique in that sense that he created a typical world that no one could be able to match. Contrary to other painters he was not attached to a movement like the Expressionist and Impressionist artists were. In fact he proved to represent a movement all by himself. All the more he was the most prolific artist of all times and had the genius to always try to achieve what he did not know at first. He truly was an inventor, a pioneer eager to embrace everything though he was not always at his best. Still, Picasso will remain a giant for a very long time, as no living artist seems capable to achieve a similar career yet.
PS: Because of penalising copyrights we cannot offer photographs for biographies of painters who have died during the past 70 years. We deeply regret this inconvenience and advise you to go to
http://www.pe.net/~jseed777/picasso.html
for photos.
Adrian Darmon

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