The Making of Picasso, 1901-1925

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Duration 01:06:08

University of South Carolina

Bradford R. Collins is Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art at the University of South Carolina, where he recently won the Mungo Distinguished Professor of the Year Award.  Dr. Collins has published widely on topics from Edward Manet to Mark Rothko to Andy Warhol and is currently writing The 16 Defining Moments in the History of Western Art: an innovative survey of Western Art that approaches the subject thematically rather than chronologically.

 

Overview

Pablo Picasso is the most famous artist of the first half of the 20th century. He is the artist most identified with the dizzying changes characteristic of that era — of what we used to simply call “modern art” (now known as Modernism). Most of the works for which Picasso is best known—including The Old Guitarist (1903-4), Les Desmoiselles d’Avignon (1907), Ma Jolie (1911-12), and Woman in White (1923)—were produced in a twenty-five-year span between 1901 and 1925. As these disparate examples suggest, this was a period of headlong changes for Picasso himself. During these two and a half decades he went through a series of very different periods, beginning with the Blue, followed by the Rose, the Primitive, the Analytic Cubist, the Synthetic Cubist, and finally his Neoclassical Period. In this lecture, Professor Collins will trace those broad changes with an eye to identifying the various influences, concerns, and purposes both biographical and art historical.

 

Recommended Reading:

The Success and Failure of Picasso, by John Berger

A Life of Picasso, vols. 1-4, by John Richardson

Pablo Picasso: A Retrospective – William Rubin, ed.

 

Discussion Questions:

  1. Why are Picasso’s paintings from the Blue Period so popular?
  2. Some art historians object to the biographical approach that I’ve taken to most of the art discussed in this lecture, arguing that the works should stand on their own, succeeding or failing as artworks entirely on their own intrinsic merits. How do you feel about this question?
  3. Is it possible to understand and/or enjoy Picasso’s Analytic Cubist paintings without an art historical explanation?
  4. I know this is beyond the scope of my lecture, but is Picasso’s Guernica (1937) a great painting?

 

 

 

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