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jon culbert
jon culbert

==Which one was it?==
What painting was it where Picasso inserted his saying "Si tienes ganas de joder, jode"?

Revision as of 05:27, 30 March 2006

List_of_Picasso_artworks_1961-1970

Amazing hubris. Could someone arrange for a more relevant entry?


Does anyone know if Picasso ever did any sculpting or metal work?


"Computers are useless. They only give you answers." There are many websites that attribute this quote to Pablo Picasso. Do any of you fellow Wikipedians know of a reputable source (preferably with date) for this quote?


Who on earth were the Stuckists?

http://www.theage.com.au/entertainment/2001/05/24/FFXODZOE3NC.html

GWO - (who is only just resisting the urge to add "nobody ever called him an asshole" to the original page on Pablo Picasso...)


", a view echoed by the Stuckists" I'd like a reference for the 'must paint' line, by the way. Picasso was a horrid man and given to statements like that which he often as not didn't mean, so I'd like to know where/when he said it.


Well maybe he didn't mean it but he was scornful of Maar's photography and encouraged her to focus on her painting. Similarly for a number of his other mistresses, even Ferdinande was encouraged to paint. Whether there is one particular quote that will "prove" the point, I don't know, that would take a true scholar rather than a jobsworth like myself.

Sorry you felt the need to remove the Stuckist reference I felt it made an interesting Wiki link. Unusual connections makes for interesting browsing.

Also isn't "horrid man" a little strong? Wouldn't "flawed" be more neutral?

R


He was always scornful of any woman's work as an artist. All of 'em. He didnt' think much of most painters, either. I think he was a great painter, but nasty. Read the Norman Mailer biography - he was more than flawed. I restrained myself from saying so in the entry, but someone will come along and document it in the 'life' section, I hope. On the Stuckists, I don't see why they shouldn't show up, but I wouldn't think in the introduction. --MichaelTinkler


I realise this is getting silly but I do think you are being unfair here. He felt Maar was a good artist but found it difficult to disentangle his feelings for her from his views on her works. He seemed to have a more balanced view of her in his last years. I don't really feel that Norman Mailer is the best biographer of Picasso either. I think you are over-stating the case for him being "nasty", he was capable of acts of great spite and cruelty, he could be cowardly and greedy but in a long and complex life that does not make him that different from many other people in similar situations.

R

That's why I'm not writing the article, because I find it easier to be objective about his work (which I teach every spring) if I don't think about him as a person; everything I know about him as a person is repulsive. His shallow, unreflective politics, his treatment of his friends and lovers, and his ego. Many artists are that way, of course, and Norman Mailer's argument (tacit in the Picasso book, explicit about his own life) is that you have to be selfish FOR your art. I wonder. On the other hand, I reserve the right to edit the article - the Stuckists don't belong in the first paragraphs of anything except an article about late modern or postmodern art. I did rewrite the sentence to include his work-ethic. I really do think he was a great as well as an important artist, but I don't have to like him as a human being. --MichaelTinkler

It is not a hundered percent clear if the paintings in the 'early life' section were made by Picasso himself or his dad. --Dennis Schaaf

Picasso's work

Did you do this?

A Nazi officer is supposed to have come to his door brandishing a postcard and demanding, "Did you do this?" "No," Picasso is supposed to have replied, "you did."

In Talk:Guernica (painting) it was removed as unreferenced.--Error 02:18, 15 Dec 2004 (UTC)

I've read that anecdote in several books on Picasso actually, though it seems more like an 'urban legend' anyway. (Cfitzart 08:37, 27 July 2005 (UTC))[reply]

Taking sides in the Spanish war

He was commisioned Guernica for the pavilion of the Spanish Republic in the Paris World Fair. Isn't that enough?--Error 02:18, 15 Dec 2004 (UTC)

Missing the point

Aprt from a few references to Cubism, his blue period, and Guernica, this article only addresses his art as if it were evidence at a psychological inquest. Nothing wrong with showing him warts and all, but it doesn't sound as if the authors of this piece have any interest in his art or its place in Western culture (other than its dollar value). If Michale Trinkler teaches Picasso, then he should find something to say about him beyond this. 24.126.41.116 05:37, 1 Feb 2005 (UTC)

periods

A timeline of his periods would add a great deal of understanding to his work.

Removal of POV text

I removed the following:

...who was used to submissive women who lived for whatever scraps of affection or attention he deigned to give them

--goethean 21:21, 20 May 2005 (UTC)[reply]

I think that the entire Personal life section has some POV issues. Parallel or Together? 04:00, 21 August 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Comment moved from main page

i think its a fac - User:210.7.71.116 07:59, 11 July 2005

Help

Where was picasso born and educarted? The preceding unsigned comment was added by 212.85.15.94 (talk • contribs) .

born is in the article - (October 25, 1881) in Málaga, Spain, it also says that he was educated at Academy of Arts (Academia de San Fernando) in Madrid (though for less than a year). Don't know why you added "Picasso was born in Barcelona" to the article. Cfitzart 13:22, 9 November 2005 (UTC)[reply]

two figures

There are "TWO figures on the right in his painting of Les Demoiselles d'Avignon" which influenced his African period, not forty-seven! (theres only 5 figures in the whole picture so I dont know how 47 was arrived at) Please make sure this doesnt get changed again, as its the second time Ive had to change this back Cfitzart 10:20, 29 November 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Blanking vandalism

On 1 Nov 2005, a vandal using the anonymous IP 156.63.253.3 blanked several paragraphs in addition to the nonsense he/she added to the page. There were several rounds of vandalism from other anons in close proximity to this edit. Some but not all of these paragraphs were later added back to the article. I can understand if it was a deliberate editorial decision to leave these paragraphs out but I wanted to be sure it was not merely an oversight. Please see this edit for the apparently lost paragraphs. Thanks. Rossami (talk) 22:37, 29 November 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Pablo Picasso

Pablo's paintings are amazing. He sculpts very well. i should do a school project on him. Written by: Rahul Verma

pablo picasso was a very wild artist! HIs pics are very wacky and different to other paintors like van gogh etc.

Gypsy Ancestry

Picasso is said to have some Gypsy ancestry.


pablo's "personal" life.

as a man Pablo had 23 girl friends and married 2 people

by, jon culbert

Which one was it?

What painting was it where Picasso inserted his saying "Si tienes ganas de joder, jode"?