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If you are an artist, you go through a lot of artistic changes in 75 years. First Communion portrait. Hola, Pablo Picasso , artist from Spain 1881 - 1973. 75 years of different styles early works blue period, rose period,
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If you are an artist, you go through a lot of artistic changes in 75 years.
Hola, Pablo Picasso, artist from Spain 1881 - 1973
75 years of different styles early works blue period, rose period, black period cubism sculpture ceramics lithography theatre sets
Paintings Sculptures (Chicago has one since 1967) Drawings Prints Pottery Designs Costumes and Scenery for Plays
First Communion 1895
Wandering Gymnasts 1901
\ Le Gourmet 1901
Girl with Dove 1901
Blue Period, Periodo Azul , 1901 – 1904 Paintings from Picasso's blue period depict sad people painted in shades of blue. The colors show us their feelings
The Blue Period is Picasso’s bridge from classic art to abstract art.
Self-portrait with palette, 1906
House in a Garden 1908
Factory in Horta de Ebbo
In late 1906, Picasso started to paint in a truly revolutionary manner. He began to show space in strongly geometrical terms. His efforts at developing an almost sculptural sense of space is the start of Cubism.
Was he drawing his pictures? or almost chiseling them out, like a sculpter?
By 1910, Picasso and Braque had developed Cubism into an entirely new way of drawing pictures. Objects were de- con- struc- ted into their components. (Taken apart) Guitar 1913
Guitar and Violin 1913 _________________ Sometimes CUBISM helped the artists to show different viewpoints of a pictures all at the same time.
In other works, CUBISM was used as a way to visually lay out the FACTS of the object, rather than just draw a picture of something In other works, CUBISM was used as a way to visually lay out the FACTS of the object, rather than just draw a picture of something
Portrait of Daniel Henry Kahnweiler 1910 Art Institute, Chicago
The aim was to produce a conceptual image of an object, as opposed to a perceptual one. concept vs perception
“I paint objects as I think them, not as I see them.”
Mantilla 1917