What I Learned at the Picasso Museum in Barcelona
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| Nature Morte au le Compotier (1945) I really liked this one, and I don't know why |
The Picasso Museum in Barcelona occupies part of an extensive warren of narrow medieval streets, alleyways, passages, arches, courtyards, stairways and dead-ends in the Born section of the old town. Its location there gives it an extra dimension, adding a depth of history and a cool feeling of stone, and a little mystery as well.
Those who know me will understand when I say that the arrangement of the museum - generally from his early life to his later life, not strictly consecutive but more a series of stages - made the visit interesting from the beginning. One of our best museum experiences ever was the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, where his work is arranged consecutively and you can see - and feel - both his mental illness and artistic brilliance progress, until at the end, it's hard to look at.
The Picasso Museum is not as dramatic, probably because Picasso's life was not as dramatic as Van Gogh's. But it did give his art a really interesting perspective - one that anyone can interpret any way they wish. I was immediately struck by some of those perspectives. Here they are.
Picasso was born in 1881, and his talent was apparently evident well before he grew up. It's almost unbelievable that a teenager had the maturity and skillset to produce these paintings; his father was an art teacher and museum curator, which probably helped, but still.
In addition, we can see the influences of lots of other artists and artistic styles in his teenage work. This reminds us that Picasso didn't spring fully-formed onto the art scene as 'Picasso;' he learned and practiced and, in his case, showed great competence in a wide variety of milieus. I learned that Picasso wasn't just a primitive surrealist; he was a pretty accomplished master of many artistic forms.
Here we go. Remember - click on pics to embiggen.
What were you doing when you were 12? Picasso was painting this:
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| Seascape - the Beach at Orzan |
And a little later, when he was fifteen, and probably obnoxious, he created these wonderful paintings:
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| Aunt Pepa |
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| Primera Comunion (5'6" x 3'10") |
Incredible. Yet my first reaction was that they were brother and sister, and the boy is picking up the vase in order to throw it at his sister, who is getting all the attention. See? Every picture tells a story.
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| Science and Charity (8'2" x 6'6") |
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| Study - Science and Charity |
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| Self-Portrait with Wig |
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| Painter at Work (1964) |
And two pieces done in 1917; so similar in subject and pose, but each masterfully representing an entirely different and distinct style. He's still a master of realism, but he's already experimenting - successfully - with surrealism:
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And another one, sixteen years earlier, when he was twenty, which combines the two. Abbey was intrigued about the pose and the way the body was tilted and what that meant. And look at that face!
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| Waiting - Margot (1901) |
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| Leaving the Theater (1901) |
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| Le Sage (1899) |
A few more that I really liked, and then I'll quit.
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| The Reapers (1948) |
It's hard not to overlay some of his Cubist and later figures on this sketch; they share that energy, bodies in coordinated action, moving gracefully but strongly and purposefully.
Picasso lived in Paris throughout the Spanish Civil War (1936-39), which has been called a rehearsal for WWII. He was profoundly affected by it, and "Guernica," his masterpiece, is a kick in the teeth. He also produced a number of satirical parodies of Francisco Franco, the fascist dictator, many of which were on the wall in Barcelona:
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| The Dream and the Lie of Franco |
One of western culture's most famous paintings is Velazquez's "Las Meninas," a large-format, seventeenth-century painting depicting a number of figures, some from the court of the Spanish King Philip IV. To use a term from music, the painting has been "covered" countless times over the centuries: painters have provided their version of Velazquez's complex elements; the attraction stems from "....the way its complex and enigmatic composition raises questions about reality and illusion, and for the uncertain relationship it creates between the viewer and the figures depicted."
Right up Picasso's alley. I liked these two takes on "Las Menimas."* For the first one, Abbey was interested in how body parts appear and disappear, change shape and position, and show up in odd places. The dress, however, is outrageous enough on its own and is reproduced faithfully.
I just thought Las Meminas was funny. That's all.
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NOTE: The original colors in some of these pictures did not always survive the transition from canvas to digital memory, and then to upload and pasting into this online format. I certainly could have edited them to provide what I thought was missing, but I'd really have to be Picasso himself to do that accurately, and I'm not.
























Thanks, Gary! Some additional thoughts on my part: It was fascinating to see how strongly form and shape would show up in Picasso's earlier work that eventually would evolve into the Cubist style. It makes sense in a way that I never understood before. He also dissects the forms in painting after painting that is based on the original; clearly explorations of whatever had caught his interest. (See the Las Meminas series.) My favorites were the simple sketches of people in which he caught movement and position with a few simple lines and shapes. I also enjoyed and could relate to Picasso's simple and spontaneous engagement with clay.
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