The Myth of Picasso
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- čas přidán 25. 09. 2022
- There was no artist bigger than Pablo Picasso for much of the 20th century. He radiated the mythic aura of creative genius, becoming the richest and arguably most influential artist in modern times - achieving fame, glory, and infamy. His public persona is now inseparable from his art.
References:
Art Forum
The New York Times
The New Yorker
“The Success and Failure of Picasso” by John Berger
“Picasso and the Painting that Shocked the World” by Miles J. Unger
“A Life of Picasso Volume II” by John Richardson
“Life with Picasso" by Françoise Gilot
“Picasso My Grandfather" by Marina Picasso - Krátké a kreslené filmy
The Myth of Picasso was that he could paint.
I would say "fiction," rather than myth.
Shows that people will believe anything if it's pushed hard enough , so the art world found a way to make more money.Picasso understood that there in lies his genius!Now everyone and anyone can call themselves an artist.He didn't have to compete with the greats and he was laughing all the way to the bank followed by one desperate penniless model after another.
I tell my students at the Angel Academy of Art, Florence, that one can sell anything for a million euros if one spends 900,000 euros promoting it.
Pablo was one of the Great salesmen. A legend in marketing and self promotion, a truly monumental ego.
You forgot: possibly the biggest troll in history. I'm convinced in his later years he thought to himself "I could literally shit onto a canvas" and it would be "genius!"
@@Oracol he knew what he was doing his whole life. He use to paint realism at his young age. He was good
@@IblewuponyourfaceIII Yes, he was talented, as demonstrated at an early age, but I feel he was trolling hard in his latter years
Precisely
I agree with you.
Ten minutes in, and you make no mention of the myth of Picasso.
Connecting the dots between African art and Picasso's Demoiselles and cubist work is a huge Ah-ha! for me. How could I not have seen this earlier?
The influence is so very clear. Understandable that he did not want to cop to this and undermine his mythological identity as an Original. Which he was anyway in western art and culture.
Thanks for including John Berger, an undervalued beloved in my book.
Excellent doc and narration. Thank You!
Thousands of books written that point out the fact that modern art was hugely influenced by tribal art. Modern art is based on the ocult and mysticism. IE Satan.
I was taught that in art school in Puerto Rico, I never knew that he denied it. When you see those African sculptures with a modern art perspective, you can see how advanced they were. Some Central American indigenous art too. And they’re made by anonymous artists… Picasso was a great artist, but his ego was too big
I'd always assumed he was influenced by African artwork. I had no idea he insisted otherwise.
What an extraordinary analysis, GREAT JOB 🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
I haaaaaate the art of Picasso with a passion
Really? Like you hate all of it? I find this hard to believe, have you seen how much his style changed over time? I can understand if you don’t like the style he is most famous for but even his earlier work looks like some of the masters. It’s not like he’s Jackson Pollock & only painted in a single technique
@@koobs4549 It only makes sense to hate (all of) Picasso's "art." It is dead boring. He is the Tiny Tim (the singer) of the art world.
I went to the Picasso Matisse show at the MOMA when they were temporarily in Brooklyn. Very memorable. Fascinating.
Nah, Picasso paintings were just like the "the Emperor's New Clothes". Art sellers marketed his work because he could make 100+ paintings in a month while traditional painters sometimes didn't complete 1 in that time. Art houses wanted to make more money, so they convinced everyone Picasso was the 'hot new thing' and his confidence as a narcissist helped to sell it.
These days people are finally seeing through the BS that was the tasteless scribbles of this art period and Picasso's work is LOSING value. The paintings at auction are quietly being sold for less than ever before.
Meanwhile masters like Bougerou who lost some popularity after his death and the rise of abstract art like Picasso, are now proudly displayed in galleries again and selling for record highs. THIS man painted with such skill and heart, he had a sound work ethic, he had integrity, and he supported and taught female artists in a time no one else would.
The modernists were simply in rebellion against the skill and control the old masters, their literal former teachers including William Bougerou, had. Being original just to be different is both immature and adds no value to society. And to assume new is always better is just the arrogance of the young.
BOUGUEREAU.
I was wondering how far down the comments section I would have to go before I would find the first rational response to this video. Thank you for your post. You will probably get a kick out of this analysis of Picasso czcams.com/video/cOQhVMxzCqs/video.htmlsi=WH8M6G7Ir1uuR9zb
Thanks million for your amazing sharing!
My local Mausoleum of Fine Art has a good Picasso, and a bad Picasso. A great Picasso exhibit there about 10 years ago, however, was uniformly beautiful.
no mention of Georges Braque who probably invented cubism and collage. His father was a qualified house painter . in those days they learned how to imitate woodgrain and marbled surfaces etc. Techniques that Braque would incorporate in his art and Picasso could copy.
It's an unfortunate omission. My original script was 8,000 words. The video isn't really about cubism so I ended up cutting a lot things including that Picasso and Braque's paintings looked nearly identical for a time. I also wanted to talk about Guernica, World War II, and fascism...
@@TheConspiracyofArt will definitely wait for the Part2!
Jesus love you, he died on the cross for you, accept him as your lord and savior he can change everything. For God so loved the world that he gave his only son, so that everyone who believes in him may not perish but may have eternal life" (John 3:16)
But you must repent too. From that time Jesus went about preaching and saying, Let your hearts be turned from sin, for the kingdom of heaven is near. (Matthew 4:17):
I much prefer Braque. In my opinion a better artist than Picasso. Picasso leaves me with no other feeling than boredom...
Collage is about as old as paper and glue, the urge to credit it's invention to some Great Artist is younger than the technique itself. (For one neat historical example: Mary Delany used collage for botanical illustrations in the 1700s.)
to learn copy painting realistically it took 4 years.but
to learn draw like a children it took a life
his drawings were trash. marxist filth
What a cute thing to say. Foolish, but cute.
If anyone is pulled toward the intersection of diffrent art forms, for example literature and painting, there is a marvelous short story by the masterful Ray Bradbuty, titled “In a Season of Calm Weather” from the collection A Medicine for Melanchoy. In the story, an American tourist visiting the French Riviera chances upon an old man drawing in the wet sand with a stick from an ice cream bar. At first amused, as he approaches him and sees the fantastic, intricate forms the man is making in the sand, he is entranced, then shocked when he takes a good look at the old man; it is Picasso, his idol, his reason for living in fact.
He wonders how he could possibly preserve the spontaneous piece of art. A plaster cast? Digging it up very carefully? A photograph? Alas, he doesn't have his camera on him. The man smiles at him, seeming to understand his desire, his agony in knowing that the drawing will not endure. They both are momentarily distracted by the beauty of the setting sun.
Then Picasso says good evening and departs. The American stands wistfully for a while longer. Later that night, with his wife, he hears the sound of the ocean. and is at once melancholic and accepting and sad. His wife asks him what's wrong. He replies, "Nothing, just the tide. Just the tide coming in."
Ray Bradbury spent some years living in Europe, and he was around more or less the same years as Picasso....chances are this story was real.
I will find this and read it!
Excellent content, keep ‘em coming! I just subscribed!
me To!
Françoise Gilot is still alive at 100 years old
Not any more🤷♀️
@@dpelpal that's true. She will be missed. She led an incredible life
So true. One forms is so many others and forms within forms…and it’s true it’s never finished. Thanks for this docu
Dude. Hella well made video.
GOATED video, thanks I really loved it.
I appreciate your very intelligent production. 🙏
Amazing video. You matched the master with your own bravado. Keep up the good work maestro .
Picasso’s goal was to culminate his talents into his own immutable style. He gave permission for high level personal style. Personal Expression over technique.
I doubt it. The dude would use his fame as a form of payment. He’d go to the grocer with no money & instead of paying, he’d jot down a quick sketch because it was an “original Picasso” & more valuable than the items he wanted. He wasn’t interested in personal expression, he was only interested in HIS own personal expression. He didn’t care about art, he only cared about Picasso & how far he could push his fame & convincing people he mattered more than he actually did
@@koobs4549 You're 100 % Wrong. I merely stated his impact on the world of Art. Those things are real and are indelible. You can't imagine Modern Art without Picasso. It's like trying to imagine EDDIE VAN HALEN out of Rock Music.
He may have been a jerk.
You may be a Marxist professor working in Yale's art department.
History will remember things accordingly.
Great docu, well done.
ballin video man
Great video, fresh look!
Great vid. Uber great channel. Gold.
Sensational and extremely educational in the best of ways!!! Thank you!!!
Yeah because it didn’t mention Picasso was a communist. His art was as distorted as his philosophical worldview.
good video glad i watched. kind of a chilling ending as well haha
Excellent video.
Brilliant sales pitch. The musings of those that attribute all kinds of fancifull motives and powers to artists.
This is a really incredible video, thank you for putting this out
Excellent production, very good narration, and an informative pleasure to watch. I want to paint a few Picasso knock offs now, just for fun!
Top mysoginst polished turd artist... By far.
ur take on his art is subjective, anyone can argue something they dont like is polished shit.
@@modestrocker1 unfortunately true.
Very nice 👍,
I see many postcards from my personal collection with details on painting and artwork that have no explanation.
The ending was amazing good stuff
Great channel! Just subscribed.
This was EXCELLENT .. thank you for your work
Brilliant. Please make one outlining the mining of Asian art in the Renaissance
Hey just wanted to say I love your stuff! Please keep going at it. From another art lover from Boston
Thanks, I appreciate it.
juxtapositions very good. will think about "all" this. thank-you.
nice work
just subbed 👍
He's the myth of the power of curiosity for the unknown ...
Anything with unknown qualities gets mythologised to gigantic proportions .....
For example, fear of the unknown afterlife creates religious beliefs and cultures ...... unproven rumored creatures like Nessie creates such curiosity it spawns a tourist industry ...... unsolved serial murderers acquires a legacy of conspiracy theorist books and movies made after them .....
Picasso intentionally included random elements and disregarded proportions and perspective to confound the art critics who dare not criticise his art for looking childish but instead convince themselves there might be something meaningful beneath the seemingly random paintings ...
Warhol did that too, simply creating an impression of mystery and unknown qualities to arouse curiosity and off they went to the bank !
P R E T E N S I O N
Legend🔥🖼🎨
Wow, that was deep. Thank you.
🤦♂️Picasso was a communist and his art was as distorted as his worldview. Garbage.
czcams.com/video/OY2IlhhIntM/video.html
Inspiring video! Thanks. Easy sub :)
New video lesssss goooo
THANK YOU
Excellent video
lovely video essay.
In Malaga Spain I saw the film where he painted on glass, it was then washed and another black and white painting began. It was genius to me. It was mesmerizing.
Amazing Video keep it up
informative thank you
Great essay.
Cool.
Upon visiting Reina Sofia in Madrid I was taken aback at how his work seemed so disjointed. Although carefully arranged by period, it did not seem as a gradual shift but rather jolting transitions, seismic leaps in style and approach, likened to the sea during a maelstrom where the turgid water threatens to engulf the shore. One espies the earlier influences of Purvis de Chavannes and later Picasso's coconspirator George Braque. But then he bursted the constraints of cubism in Les Demoiselle d'Avignon. Nah, forget the labels. Upon looking at this retrospective of Picasso, one sees complexity straight on as tangled vines lost in a labyrinth where one no longer finds his or her way around.
Matisse and Picasso were frenemies
“It is impossible to look at his art without thinking about him.”
That’s not good or bad.
14:27 - 14:45 YES YES! This articulates it perfectly. I had always thought of art being magic, but never found a real way to define it. But this! This! It's perfect.
No, not what art is at all. It's two utilitarian objects that both function exactly the same... so which one do you choose? The one that looks more elegant to you. The one that might evoke a certain feeling. The one who's colors might put you in a certain mood. Now take two objects that have no utility at all, and apply the same rules. Which one would you want to hang on your wall and wake up to every morning. At least that's my definition. It has to be something I want to keep looking at. And that makes me feel something. Something that has emotional tones that are incredibly unique. Music is similar in that regard.
Pablo wouldn't know what "Divine or Sacred" creations are if his life depended on it.💀He is as guilty of steeling from the indigenous as much as the colonialist rapists who built the Musée d'Ethnographie du Trocadéro,
I wrote about this exact subject for my MSc dissertation!
The camera is at the heart of it all, change was needed otherwise just take a picture.
Saw the retrospective of his work at MoMA in 1980. Can't get enough Picasso; Guernica, sculpture, etchings, later works, can't get enough.
That's cool.
@@TheConspiracyofArt When watching your video, I finally broke down and ordered Francoise Gilot's 'Life with Picasso'.
@@pottersjournal Hah. Yeah I think it's an important piece of the puzzle - and she was smart and talented.
@Debed Thanks. I know interviews with her are fascinating to listen to.
awesome content
Born to it.
Good video.
One true love to create.
No myth, just relentless hard work and incredible creativity.
He did not have incredible creativity. He was a degenerate and did not make art.
I see Picasso as the greatest gaslighting scam of his time.
His works are grotesque, admired by those who like to pretend they “understand” some deep inner meanings, but in actuality are as gullible as the people who fall for pyramid schemes.
I don’t begrudge Picasso the enormous wealth and fame he got from tricking people into and “emperor’s new clothes” type of grift. It must be human nature to rob those who beg to be robbed.
@@docinparadise - It's the countless modern "conceptual" artists who came after Picasso who are the true gaslighters. Picasso had a full range of skills and did traditional works of great beauty, but also experimented endlessly with form, creating what was "grotesque" to the casual observer. Sure, much of it appears strange and ugly, but look at the totality of his work.
Excellent overview of a modern master. Thank You.
i always saw thru it and always will.
🙌🙌🙌
That was an INCREDIBLE video! Particularly the part about le demoselle domine (can’t French spell) but wow, great job. I can’t wait to see more 🎉
You just missed an "i". Demoiselle. The other word is d'Avignon.
Picasso is always more famous than good!
WOW.
I love the Old man with the guitar 🎸 really awesome painting. It may have been someone else I am thinking of.
Can you please do a video on Dali?
❤👏
This is brilliant.
Pollock worried him, no matter what he said. He always reckoned Matisse was better than himself.
The concept of modernity seems lacking ought to be called momentum instead. We've gained so much speed that we've blew through several ions already.
A "work of art" that needs to be explained is no longer a work of art.
Partially i don't agree. Sometimes, arts qualities comes from the context surrounding it. But you are right art is about what a person feels from the piece
If they didn't inform you a painting was a Rembrandt's you'd probably wouldn't even look at it.
Idk why people like being ignorant on purpose
Artists resent the idea that the unschooled hoi polloi should have an opinion. At least some artists do. These artists, coincidentally, don't usually have much of an audience
Depends. Some people are just too uncultured that they can't understand even the most basic art.
I'm not going to watch this. Picasso was real!
The video is still quite good.
A real ass
no he wasnt
8:54 dangerous looking fruit. I died.
Convo i had:
"If you could have dinner with any deceased person who would it be?"
"Picasso"
"Why"
"So I can kill him myself"
killing picasso would have done way more good than the attempted murder of andy warhol
Great video! I loved it. I think it’s better to say “girls” rather than “women” when you’re talking about the people Picasso was preying on, since they were in fact, young teenage girls. 🤢
picasso was a pedophile and thats the only legacy he should have
Yep
Omg smh the unsettling feelings I felt that are looking true should have known smh him and his boi Balthums.
Unfair generalisation. Only Marie Therese was under 20 when they met. Like the others (perhaps half a dozen over half a century) they would become his muse and transform his art.
Lovely video, just one nitpicky note:
18:55 The Dutch name "Piet" sounds like the English name "Pete". A lot of people might claim otherwise, but none of them will be Dutch.
Fijne dag!
Thanks :)
Juist, wij bekijken dit tenslotte niet voor Piet Snot!
This man took up the eradication of love from his heart and mind...and accomplished its avoidance as a misanthropic 'champion' in the lurid Pantheon men have made of such "gods". Despite his canonization by those envious of his temporal success, I doubt he has maintained any affection for the cult he so assiduously practiced at one time.
Stands testament of the greatness of his art that it continues to provoke controversy a century later. Count yourself lucky if it gets under the skin .
He looks like my High School art teacher 😊
He still is
No, I disagree. He wasn't the "inventor of cubism" (he hated that they described his work as cubism). He learned cubism from Georges Braque. A great artist Picasso was, but not truly for what he is acclaimed to be. He personified art because he was prolific with mediocre works (much the same as Stephen King is synonymous with horror). He is more an enigma whose fame is perpetuated with uninterrupted promotion by those who profit from it. There is no mystery other than that... He is endlessly promoted, just as Van Gogh and Leonardo are.
I don’t disagree. But I would say no one person invents anything. I’m presenting the mythology of Picasso in the beginning of the video. The reality is that Picasso made a huge contribution to the development of Cubism but that the invention of the genre was a collaborative effort. I don’t think there was another painter that contributed more to the rapid abstraction of art in the early 20th than Picasso - which includes many art movements. I’ve heard Picasso called the father of cubism. I’ve also heard Cezanne referred to in the same way. I think there are a lot of ways to frame the argument. Art history books typically refer to Les Demoiselle d’Avignon as “proto-cubism” which is another way to think about it.
@@TheConspiracyofArt I, myself, have never heard of Cézanne being referred to as an experimenter of cubism. I agree that he is somewhat talented as an artist but I fail to see him as "great" without the art world declaring him a force of climactic change, nor without their causal-course deeming him as such. He may have liberated Matisse and Picasso (along with other, more obscure artists), but in that sense he would have been more of an "artist's artist", as the vast majority of would-be-artists became marginalized by the modern movement and chose different career paths. Picasso is probably the most difficult of artists to talk about (from my experience) and with good reason. For all his prolific talent (discovered or still yet to be uncovered and discussed), he will forever be a thorn in every artist's vine of artistic understanding.
I think the idea is that Cezanne’s analytic approach broke-down composition geometrically and this is at the heart of cubism. I agree Picasso is hard to talk about. Like Warhol and countless other artists, he could speak in riddles and admitted to contradicting himself or making things up if pressed for a remark.
@@TheConspiracyofArt There are many great artists who have contributed to many different styles, but, as you say, none of them have any right to be proclaimed the inventor of a style by themselves. That being said, artists are either deemed great for their body of works and subtle contributions or changes they have incorporated, or some combination of styles or, perhaps, something intangible. How we choose to study and critique these works is an intangible unto itself, of course. I admire your effort in dealing with some of the highlights, lows and social aspects of Picasso, as I know it to be trouble even reiterating what has been proclaimed in hundreds of books about the man. It is still a great topic of discussion if you can find willing participants to converse with.
@@TheConspiracyofArt The "mythology of Picasso" may just be that we cannot see the woods for the trees, as well.
By seeing him as a powerful limiter of the art world, I am giving him the same power that he went against when he challenged the rules set by his contradictory father. In his own right, he was faced with limitation set upon him by outside forces which he banished from his mind and liberated himself, thus creating his need to continue creating and building himself up. The contradictions he faced in his youth may have at the same time alienated him from society even more than a normal artist would be. This is not as clear to me, however, to explain Cezanne the same way, as I would need to further study him. So, in hindsight, perhaps it should be easier to celebrate Picasso as a sort of "liberator" of the art world after all. Thank you, I really needed this realization that your docu vid actually helped me see.
Subbed.
Now it’s just some shit we sketch in our free time, Internet hegemony I love it
I never cared for his art, and now I learned he was even more arrogant than I knew. Dali was better.
You might enjoy this hilarious takedown of Picasso czcams.com/video/cOQhVMxzCqs/video.htmlsi=WH8M6G7Ir1uuR9zb
Just before it crashes, an ailing society tends to feed itself to the collective ego of the psychopathic type.
If you’re trying to dismiss the artistic talent or sincerity, or innovative skills of clearly one the most important artists in history, it doesn’t hold water. Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, Basquiat, Rothko, Lichtenstein, all these successful artist had to promote themselves. There are no “myths” about Picasso. You need to find better ways to make your brand stand out than putting others down.
There won't ever be another.
Picasso could NOT emulate Velasquez.
Picasso was a fraud, and he even stated it himself.
ok.
100% absolutely right
Seems like Mark Gonzalez has become skateboarding’s Picasso.
Maybe but Neil Blender made Picassos in the middle of skate contests :)
I recently found a motherload of Picasso's mostly jewelry pottery and decor a few other really random thing that scare the shit outta me.. unexplainable things.. like he chose me to own his works as many are engraved to me.. my full name. They will say like to Carl Faberge on a few.. then for.. and my name😳.. and I am afraid to show anybody because the extent of what I've found and the images that are behind the works are extremely explicit and demonic.. a statue I found dripping in gold blindly attached me to it at a thrift store like a magnet without even seeing it and when I grabbed it an unexplainable surge of ominous energy jolted through my body like I've never felt or experienced.. an unholy almost violently powerful feeling.. but what I experienced once I brought it home was unbelievable and insane, I don't even want to talk about it.. I've got 100s of pieces signed Picasso a bracelet I found has a picture of me in it.. wtf is going on?
I went to the Picasso museum in Barcelona. Was the most boring museum exhibit
ive ever seen...
You might enjoy this hilarious takedown of Picasso czcams.com/video/cOQhVMxzCqs/video.htmlsi=WH8M6G7Ir1uuR9zb
The Mystery of Picasso, the movie, is like an edge of your seat action movie for artists. The changes he makes are scary as he keeps ruining perfect composition to make another and another, matador style action - it will get artists to freak out.
Agree. The last part with Picasso painting a huge wall mural timelapsed over a few days is a roller-coaster ride.
My take was paintings or images he did previously was used in the mural as a component, a letter or word in the larger composition. So, similiar to writing a rough draft erasing, crossing out a section Picasso would ad hoc create a painting putting down a pre-formed image then painting over or scraping it off the ground as he improvised it.
@@vincentgoupil180 yeah, you get it. I just rented it from the library the other day and it never gets old. Peace ✌
this is far from an artist freakout
@@modestrocker1 didja see the whole movie, I think it's on kanopy for free
Picasso was not an artist, just a degenerate.
trolled us all for eternity :)