Pablo Picasso
France, 1881-1973
Pablo Picasso (pah-blow
pee-cah-so) was born in
Malaga, Spain. He did his first painting
at the age of eight. One day his father,
a painter and teacher, came home to a surprise:
his young son had finished a portrait. After
examining the work, Pablo’s father
gave the boy all his art materials. So great
was Pablo’s work that his father vowed
never to paint again.
Picasso went to Paris in 1904 to live and
work. There he met other artists and writers
who gathered to talk about what art was,
what it could be, and what it should be.
The creative climate encouraged Picasso
to develop a new style, which he called
Cubism. Combining his appreciation
of African masks with artist Paul Cézanne’s
insistence that “everything in nature
is made up of squares, cylinders, and cubes,”
Picasso simplified his subjects into geometric
forms.
However, Picasso did not merely show geometry
in his work. His aim was to shock his viewers
into visual awareness.
Picasso's artistic intensity drove him to
go beyond oil painting and experiment with
all media, discovering new forms and new
ideas. Because Picasso accepted uncertainty
in his work, it developed in a unique and
innovative manner.
In his long and full life, Pablo Picasso
passed through many different styles. For
a time he created the fractured images that
were the hallmark of the Cubist movement.
He later returned to painting the human
figure.
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