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Anonymous Thomas said...

Off topic, but I think of interest to you:

http://www.googleartproject.com/

February 1, 2011 at 6:46 AM

Blogger kev ferrara said...

I can't help but admire Picasso as a graphic artist. Even when I don't like his work, I am still astounded by his invention and verve.

On another note, the more I dwell upon it, the more merit the conspiracy theory about Picasso's early work seems to have. Where are all Picasso's failed compositions from when he was 15? Or 14? Or 13? Pretty much everything else he does at that age is a portrait with no composition to it at all, let alone the academic compositioning we find in his communion painting.

Composition is the most difficult aspect of art and the thing that requires the most maturity. Let's face it, 15 year olds just don't make their first major composition look like a salon worthy piece without some evidence of a whole lot of practice... or dare I say it, outside assistance. (He wouldn't be the first boy to get a little boost up from a dad with ambitions for him.)

February 1, 2011 at 11:15 AM

Anonymous larissa said...

I love Picasso's early work best, particularly La Salchichona and Mujer en Azul (and another portrait in the same mode and it seems, of the same mujer) which I saw in BArcelona. But I think the erotic drawings and watercolors he did in his early 20's are my favorite. They're casual and witty and don't betray any of the (IMO) misogyny of his later paintings of women....

February 2, 2011 at 3:38 PM

Anonymous Anonymous said...

first communion is way better than any of the others. seems a bit suspicious

September 15, 2012 at 9:26 PM

Blogger chris miller said...

Nice blog!

Since a Picasso show is coming to Chicago next week, I've also been looking at the Richardson book and pondering the same question you've raised.

Here's my take on it, based on a comparison of the charcoal portraits that Picasso and Ramon Casas exhibited at the same time and place.

February 7, 2013 at 7:50 PM

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