Alfonso 4
One of the Picasso favorite pastimes was during the first winter of the First World War
was learning Russian. “It was a fasicination with Russia and mostly a fascination with the
Barones Helen d’Oettingen. “ Part f Picasso seductiveness was his willingness to be seduced,
and he and the Barones spent many long evenings together, absorbed, as far as the world was
concerned, in advancing his knowledge of Russia” (Cooper 15).
At the same time when
Picasso was having one of his many flings, Eva became very sick. When Eva was
hospitalized, that was the first time Picasso was alone in years. He went to see her everyday at
the hospital, but he needed someone to comfort him during his lonely nights. He found
someone to comfort him during his lonely nights. Gaby Lespinasse was her name. A beautiful
twenty-seven year old Parisian. December 14, 1915, Eva dies. “My poor Eva is dead,” he
wrote to Gertrude Stein. “ It was a great sorrow… she was always so good to me.” Ever since
his little sister had so suddenly died, it seemed that death always winning.” (Huffington 52).
This was Picasso saddest Christmas of his life. After Eva’s death Picasso met Olga
Koklova, she was the daughter of a colonel in the Imperial Russian Army and had been bornin
in Niezin, in the ukraine. Picassso had always had a fascination with Russian things. On July
12, 1918 Picasso married Olga. On February 4, 1921, Olga gave birth to a baby boy. They
The Term Paper on 2 Reasons Why Russian Women Are Not Desperate To Leave Their Country
Dear Reader, If you are one of the many Westerners who harbor the myth that most or all Russian women are desperate to leave their country or want a green card, then please read my article below and consider the 12 points that I make which prove it to be a narrow-minded egocentric American myth. These points are based on my experiences of being 6 months in Russia, visiting 9 cities, and meeting ...
named him Paulo. Paulo was one of Picasso favorite subjects for many years. He first
sketched him on the day he was born, and he continued and paint pictures of Paulo while he
grew up.
In 1927, Picasso met Marie-Therese, who would later give birth to his daughter. On
September 5, 1935 Marie-Therese gave birth to a girl. This was Picasso second child by a
different women. “ The baby was given the name of her father’s dead sister, Maria de
Alfonso 5
LaConcpcion, but on her birth certificate the identity of the father was declared
unknown”(Huffington 54).
He loved Paulo more than he loved her. He would later change her
name to Maya Walter.
One of Picasso’s best-known paintings is Guernica, done in 1937 during the Spanish
Civil War. Nazi airplanes had bombed the Spanish town of Guernica. Picasso was outraged
by news of the death and destruction and put these feelings into a painting 26 feet long. It was
painted in black, white, and grey, and it shows people dying and suffering raid. (e.library).
The novelist Claude Roy, saw Guernica at the Paris World’s Fair and described it as “ a
message from another planet.” “Its violence dumbfounded me, it petrified me with an anxiety
I had never experienced before.” The Surrealist poet Michel Leiris summed up the sense of
despair engendered by Guernica: “ In a rectangle of black and white such as that in which
ancient tragedy appeared to us, Picasso sends us our announcement of our mourning: all that
we love is going to die…..” Herbert Read went even further: all that we love, Picasso is
saying has died.
On May 15, 1947, at the Belvedere Clinic in Boulogne, Francoise gave birth to a baby
boy. This was Picass’s third child by a third women. They named the baby Claude. This is
what Dominique Desanti, who visited a few times after Claude was born had to say.
“They were very striking couple together. She was so beautiful and he was
really astonishing, so aesthetically they were very striking to look at. He would
make aggressive remarks meant to pu down and humiliate her in front of
The Essay on Communication Between Men And Women
As everyone knows by now, there is a difference between a man and a womans outer appearance. What some people do not realize is that a man and a woman are also different in communication techniques. Generally speaking, men and women fall into two categories when dealing with communication techniques. When men talk, it is for giving information. Deborah Tannen says this informative speaking is ...
otheres ans she would laugh and make what he said seem innocuous. He would
Alfonso 6
refer to her as “the woman.” “What has the woman made for dinner?” he
would ask. Or he would look at an erotically dressed woman on a postcard and
sight: “What a dream to have such a woman in front of you.” And Francoise
would laugh and diffuse it: “It’s very easy. We can do that. Just get me a dress
like that and I’ll put ion – it would be a very amusing disguise.” She never
looked cross or humiliated; she always made you feel that they were acting in a
play. That was his way of being’ he was cruel whether it was with his woman,
his best friends or whoever was around if he felt like it. So if you decided to
live with him, you needed unusual strength an unusual maturity to find your
part in his play and improvise the text”(Huffington 60).
In 1949, Picasso had another child with Francoise, it was a little girl, her name was
Ann Paloma Gilot. Francoise taught it would be best if Picasso would just stop pretending that
he had no other life. She Maya to meet Claude and Paloma. “Why have Maya continue to
grow a lie, hearing at school or reading a newspaper and magazines things that her mother
denied at home? It’s the easiest way to go crazy,” Francoise told Picasso, “not knowing if you
are seeing the sun at noon or the moon. You pretend that you are unusual , then let’s really
lead an unusual life, instead of playing hide-and-seek with the truth.” He did not like idea of
Francoise trying to put and end to his games, but at the same he was intrigued by the .
possibilities that would be opened up by such an encounter” (Duncan 68).
He finally agreed
for Maya to meet Claude and Paloma. Francoise and Marie-Therese were going to meet too.
Alfonso 7
Picasso’s wife started to figure out Picasso’s strategy. “He’d like to put those around
him in competition with each other. He was masterful at using one person like the red flag and
the other like the bull. While the bull was busy charging against the red flag, Pablo could,
unnoticed, deal his wounding thrusts. And most people didn’t even think to look who was
The Report on How Did the Life of Ancient Greek or Roman Woman Differ from the Life of a Woman in the West Today?
Classical Civilisation thepiggrinder How did the life of ancient Greek or Roman woman differ from the life of a woman in the west today? Women in the modern western culture of today enjoy many more rights than those of ancient Greek and Roman women. Woman in the modern culture of the west today have an unrestricted amount of freedom (often supported by law such as diversity and equality ...
hiding behind the red flag” ( Huffington 63).
“November 28, 1953, a month after his seventy- second birthday, he stopped talking
and took his despair in hand, and started working.” He worked feverishly, and in just over two
months produced 180 drawings.” The peot Michel Leiris called the series a “visual diary of a
hateful season in hell, a crisis in his private lif leading him to question everything”
(Huffington 63).
Rebecca West wrote, “ soft against her smooth flesh, its nervous energy
crackling against her serenity, her faculty of acceptance bringing the little animal into unity
with herself. She is as strongly affirmative as a Greek goddess. “ She is the tree of life and the
tree of knowledge. And the painter’s despair is not just that he is an old man who must give
up “his place at the feast of sensual pleasure”; it is that he an old who will die with out
knowing why he has lived and why he has painted. Neither his gifts nor his endless sexual
adventures have brought him any closer to the secret of life that the young woman seems to
know and from which she seems to draw her serenity and her deep acceptance of everything,
including” (Huffington 65).
On March 2, 1961 Picasso married Jacqueline Roque. This was his third wife and his
last one too. She wasn’t fond of his kids cause they were just a constant reminder of the
women Picasso has had in his life. Plus it also reminded her that Picasso couldn’t give her a
Alfonso 8
child at his old age. As Picasso’s children got older she could no longer tolerate them
anymore. She would make up lies about them and he would totally isolate himself from his
kids. She just wanted Picasso all to herself.
In June of 1972 Picasso drew his last self-portrait. It was a face of a dozen anguish and
primordial horror held next to the mask that he had worn for so long and that had fooled so
many. ( Huffington 67).
It was the horror he had painted and the anguish he had caused and
which, in his own anguish, he continued to cause. (Huffington 67).
On April 8, 1973 Pablo Picasso died. Three months his grandson Pablito died of
The Essay on Pablo Picasso Personal Life
Pablo Picasso was born in 1881. His father was a respected art teacher. Many think his father's being an art teacher had a major influence on Picasso's artistic interest. It didn't take long for Picasso to get accepted into the Academy at Barcelona, for he was only fourteen. Picasso was a fast learner and found school to be boring. Barcelona was where Picasso painted his first work, "Girl with ...
starvation. On October of 1977, on the fiftieth anniversary of the first time they met Marie-
Therese hanged herself. In 1986 Jacqueline shot herself in the temple. I learned that Picasso
always needed someone with him, sexually, mentally, he just needed someone. His death
brought a lot of tragedy on his family. As me move toward the beginning of a new century,
what will Picasso, so irrevocably tied to the age that is dying, have to say to the age being
born again(Huffington 70).
Bibliography
Juan Alfonso
Art Appreciation
Mr. Shields
Bibliography
Diax, Pierre and Boulaille, George . The Sculpture of Picasso . Time Life
Books, 1967
Cooper, Douglas. The Blue Rose Period of Picasso. Time Life Books,
1967
Berger, John. The Success and Failure of Picasso. Battmer: Penguin Books, 1965
Duncan, David. The Private World of Picasso. New York: Harper, 1958
Gilot, Francoise. Life With Picasso. New York: McGraw Hill, 1964
Padrta, Jim. Picasso The Early Years. New York: Tudor Publishing Co, n.d.
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Fifth Edition. Columbia University: Lemont
& Hauspie Speech, 1993
Picasso, Pablo , Young Students Learning Library, 1994
Huffington, Arianna. Picasso: Creator and Destroyer, Atlantic Monthly,
1988