First in a series of books devoted to individual masterworks in the collection of the Cleveland Musuem of Art.
Life with Picasso, written with Carlton Lake and published in 1961, is about Picasso the artist and Picasso the man.
... an unholy row going on inside , and your name was being mentioned . Well , shouted , actually . ' ' Maybe they were making the short list for the next super's job , ' I suggested . ' No way , Charlie . Hilditch was telling him that he ...
The writer Raymond Queneau noted in his diary (October 19, 1931) that Picasso had “resumed chasing girls.“ These affairs were usually casual. Sometime in 1932, however. Picasso took a liking to a Japanese model and did at least two ...
Part of a series which introduces key artists and movements in art history, this book deals with Picasso.
“nothing but sentiment”: Richardson, A Life of Picasso, I:277. ... “I was living on the rue Champollion”: Michael FitzGerald, Making Modernism: Picasso and the Creation of the Market for Twentieth Century Art (New York: Farrar, ...
Acclaimed scholar Mary Ann Caws provides in Pablo Picasso a fresh and concise examination of Picasso's life and art, revisiting the themes that occupied him throughout his life and weaving these themes through his crucial close ...
In the second volume of his definitive biography of Pablo Picasso, John Richardson draws on the same combination of lively writing, critical astuteness, exhaustive research and personal experience that made...
... an image of sublime symbolic hypocrisy and popular obsession , have been able to mask such flagrant and unconscious ' erotic fury ? " 36 In April , Éluard had warned Dalí not to submit something too outrageous for publication in the ...
John Richardson draws on the same combination of lively writing, critical astuteness, exhaustive research, and personal experience which made a bestseller out of the first volume and vividly recreates the artist's life and work during the ...
Fernande is given her own voice by way of excerpts from her candid memoirs. Including the artist's friendships with Apollonaire and Gertrude Stein, the book evokes the atmosphere of bohemian life in Paris in the early 1900s.