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Life of Picasso: v.3: Vol 3 Book
The long-awaited third volume of John Richardsonâ??s definitive biography of Pablo Picasso combines the critical astuteness, exhaustive research, and stunning narrative that made the first two volumes an art-historical breakthrough as well as a pleasure to read.The Triumphant Years takes up the artistâ??s life in 1917, when Picasso and Cocteau left wartime Paris for Rome to work with Diaghilevâ??s Ballets Russes on their revolutionary production of Parade. Visits to Naples, above all to the Farnese marbles in the Museo Nazionale, would leave Picasso with a lifelong obsession with classical sculpture as well as the self-referential commedia dellâ??arte. After returning to Paris and marrying one of Diaghilevâ??s ballerinas, Olga Khokhlova, he abandoned bohemia for the drawing rooms of Paris. Hence, his so-called Duchess period, which coincided with his switch to neoclassicism, and would ultimately be absorbed into a metamorphic form of cubism.In the summer of 1923, Picasso and his American friends Gerald and Sara Murphy transformed the French Riviera from a winter into a summer resort, when they persuaded the proprietor of the Hôtel du Cap at Antibes to keep the place open for the summer. In doing so, they made the Riviera Europeâ??s major playground. Mediterraneanism was in Picassoâ??s bones. Born in Málaga, he would always identify with this inland sea.In 1927 the artistâ??s life underwent a major change; he abandoned society for a life out of the spotlight with a beautiful seventeen-year-old girl, Marie-Thérèse Walter. His erotic obsession with Marie-Thérèse would result in an ever-growing antipathy for his neurasthenic, understandably jealous wife. Balletic clues have enabled Richardson to identify a number of baffling figure-paintings as portrayals of Olga and reinterpret the work of the late 1920s and early 1930s. Picassoâ??s passionate love for his mistress and his passionate hatred for his wife can be fully understood only in light of each other.The last three chapters constitute an annus mirabilisâ??spring 1931 to spring 1932â??during which the artist celebrated his fiftieth birthday. Challenged to scale new heights by the passage of time, Picasso lived up to his shamanic belief that painting should have a magic function. In the course of this year, he reinvented sculpture and to a great extent his own imagery in a bid to Picassify the classical tradition. The resultant retrospective in Paris and Zurich in the summer of 1932 confirmed Picasso as the leader of the modern movement.Read More
from£34.07 | RRP: * Excludes Voucher Code Discount Also available Used from £16.14
- 0307266656
- 9780307266651
- John Richardson
- 1 November 2007
- Potter Style
- Hardcover (Book)
- 608
- 1st Knopf Pbk. Ed
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