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PICASSO : NARCISSICISM, SELFISHNESS AND VAMPIRISM

Cet article se compose de 11 pages.
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At this time, he was just starting to be famous and rich and the newly-formed couple lived in luxury until the birth of Paulo in 1921. Picasso first became a passionate father and took some rare pleasure in representing his son and his wife in many paintings. However, Olga was quite jealous and often angrily reatcted when he referred to his past life. Picasso went on to succumb to his quite inconstant nature and soon deserted Olga who ultimately became mad and died in 1955. As a result of their split, Paulo had a shaky existence and became a heavy drinker after leaving his own wife and children.

Described by Christian Zervos as the proudest man of his time, Picasso had a strange attitude with people most probably because he had to protect himself against so many courtesans during his lifetime but he was selfish by nature and never really paid much attention to his mistresses, wives, children or grand-children. As an example, Paulo's son called Pablito killed himself at 24 the day after Picasso's burial to which he had been forbidden to attend while his sister Marina eventually managed to eschew the destructive influence of her grand father in committing herself to humanitarian deeds and in adopting Chinese or Vietnamese orphans.

Picasso, who found his existence much boring when staying idle, also had an ackward habit of being a destroyer in normal life as if he could not dissociate his activity as an artist eager to bring about new revolutions in art from the man he should have been outside his studio. He was in fact an artist from head to toes 24 hours a day and being with him was for a woman like sacrificing her life to a vampire.

In 1935, Picasso was living with Marie Thérèse Walter, a blonde girl, who gave birth to a daughter called Maria de la Concepcion, who was nicknamed «Maya» by her father.

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