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PICASSO : NARCISSICISM, SELFISHNESS AND VAMPIRISM

Cet article se compose de 11 pages.
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Maya was probably Picasso's only child who thought that her childhood was like paradise while her mother went on to accept to keep secret her love affair with the great master. She was 17 when Picasso, who was still married to Olga, accosted her in front of the Galeries Lafayette store in Paris and told her : «I am Picasso and we are going to do great things together». Marie-Thérèse, quite subdued, immediately fell under his spell and both lived in an apartment not far from the one he shared with Olga.

SUICIDES AND MADNESS

Marie-Thérèse had a harsh time living with Picasso but remained by his side during his seven-year long tormented love-affair with Dora Maar, a photographer, he had picked up in a café. She was probably the woman he was most fond. While living with Françoise Gilot, he once angrily told her his mistress that she did not love him as much as Marie-Thérèse who in fact never openly complained regarding his attitude. Still, Marie-Thérèse did not get over his many infidelities and lived in misery after their separation until she committed suicide in 1977.

For a woman, living with Picasso was equivalent to being a slave and many of his mistresses, who first accepted their fates, eventually became prone to madness like Dora Maar, who found it so hard to accept a final split in 1944 and went on to live like a nun surrounded by Picasso's works, souvenirs and gifts in her Parisian apartment.

In 1943, Picasso met Françoise Gilot, a 21-year-old woman artist and invited her to visit his studio. While courting her there he said : « You will live here without seeing anybody else than me. We will thus share that secret together ». Françoise later gave birth to Claude in May 1947 and to Paloma in April 1949 but she was so independent-minded and untameable that Picasso became frustrated and did not accept the fact that she could escape from his grips.

Françoise, left him in 1953, before he could take a decision to leave her while her children Claude and Paloma, who herself became a successful designer, had to fight hard twenty years later in order to obtain a share of his heritage.

Picasso met Jacqueline Roque in 1954 and married her in 1961. She was to become his last female companion and enabled him at last to forget about his restlessness and to find peace in his heart. During the 19 years he spent with Jacqueline, he often represented her in many ways in his paintings while they moved together from one place to another in Southern France, notably in Mougins, Cannes or Vauvenargues.

With Jacqueline Picasso thought he had found back his youth and produced some exhalirating works but his last wife, already the mother of a daughter called Catherine, bore him no child. Strangely enough she met the fate of Marie-Thérèse and faced the terrible anguish of some of the other women who shared his life as she shot herself in 1986, 13 years after his death.

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