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PICASSO : NARCISSICISM, SELFISHNESS AND VAMPIRISM

Cet article se compose de 11 pages.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
By Adrian Darmon

Pablo Picasso spent a great deal of his life painting his self-portrait often showing himself as a kind of fully narcissic half-god who behaved in fact like a tyrant and almost a vampire with his wives, mistresses and family.

When this genius died in 1973 leaving behind him thousands of incredible works that made him the greatest master of the 20th Century, his heirs, between Jacqueline, his last wife, Paulo, his legitimate son from his marriage with Olga, Maya, the daughter he had from Marie-Thérèse Walter and Paloma and Claude, the children born following his love affair with Françoise Gilot, fought an intense and somewhat disgusting battle to share the bulk of his unbelievable production worth billions of dollars.

The life of Picasso, who was first thought to be still-born and was saved at the last minute by a rather shrewd nurse, was marred by tragedies. It all started at the turn of this century when some of his friends, notably Eusebio Guell or Casagemas who killed themselves, died prematurely while he himself faced a terrifying situation until at least 1905 in Paris. As an example he was more than once forced to burn his drawings to heat his Montmartre hotel room during the cold winter of 1902 while two of his neighbours of his Bateau-Lavoir studio, a Polish comedian and a German painter, committed suicide in 1904.

Picasso, who invented Cubism with Braque and once said that he needed not to look for new concepts because he was finding them naturally, had quite a strong appetite for women who were mostly like toys in his hands.

A STRONG APPETITE FOR WOMEN

As soon as he arrived in Paris he found mistresses among his models and waited until his 36th birthday to get married after meeting in Rome Olga Kokhlova, a Russian ballet dancer from the Diaghilev troop, in 1917. The daughter of a Russian general, Olga rapidly subjugated Picasso who had come to Rome with the poet Jean Cocteau. Picasso was then a kind of anarchist while Olga represented the bourgeois values he had known within his family during his youth. He then took her to Spain with the apparent desire to conciliate their differences or affinities and married her in July 1918. The death of his friend Apollinaire in November of that year troubled him much as he felt his youth had gone for good and gave up painting his selfportrait for many years. But as usual he managed to overcome of grief and lived on giving the impression that nothing could destroy him.

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