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PICASSO : NARCISSICISM, SELFISHNESS AND VAMPIRISM

Cet article se compose de 11 pages.
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Dora Maar probably cried much during their seven-year love affair as he painted her many times as a weeping woman. Between 1937 and 1944, Picasso refused to see his son Paulo and kept seeing Marie-Thérèse provoking Dora's anger. He thus had violent quarrels with the latter who was often beaten up.
Still, Dora had much influence over his work and inspired him much when he painted his masterpiece «Guernica» as well as many other works. He also represented her in many portraits while she initiated him in the use of a camera, enabling him to develop new techniques. In filming the various stages of the construction of «Guernica» Dora also became the first woman in his life who showed a deep if not active interest in his works.

During the occupation of France by German troops, Picasso adopted a strange neutral attitude and worked as if the war had not taken place. Somewhat unconcerned, he even went as far as buying some of his previous works, stolen from Jewish collectors by the Nazis in some Parisian galleries run by French collaborationist dealers. However, when Otto Abetz, Hitler's ambassador to Paris, visited his studio and on seeing a photo of «Guernica» asked Picasso : «Oh, was it you who did that ?», the master answered : «No, you did…». In addition, many collaborationist artists and critics lashed at him during the war years for being responsible for the crisis of modern art at that time. He nevertheless was among the rare friends who attended the burial of Max Jacob who had died in the detention camp of Drancy just before his transfer to Auschwitz with other Jewish inmates. Jacob was a Catholic convert but in Nazi eyes he was still a Jew. Picasso himself had been accused of having some Jewish blood running in his veins and, responding to such collaboriationist accusation, said : «I wish I had». After the war, he decided to join the Communist Party explaining his choice by the fact that his painting had always been revolutionary and thinking that he was finding a new fatherland but in becoming a Communist he had no intention to give up his creative freedom.

LIVING BY HIS SIDE WAS LIKE INFERNO

Olga was becoming mad, Marie-Thérèse was suffering from his infidelities, Dora was getting increasingly jealous while Picasso continued to chase girls. After meeting Françoise Gilot in 1943, he represented her as the flower-woman but at the end of the war he was back with Marie-Thérèse for a brief spell and was about to end his affair with Dora with whom he was cynical and violent.

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