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Françoise Gilot (1921-
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Françoise Gilot was born November 26, 1921 in the
chic Parisian suburb of Neuilly-sur-Seine, France. An only child, she is the
daughter of Emile Gilot, an agronomist, and Madeline Renoult. Attracted by art
from a young age, and influenced by her mother who was herself an amateur
artist, Françoise ultimately rebelled against practicing law--her father's
chosen occupation for her. In 1943, at the age of twenty-one, Gilot had her
first exhibition, despite the ban on modern art by the Nazi occupiers. It was
during this same period that she met Pablo Picasso. Eventually, she would
become his muse, mistress, and mother of two of his children in a tumultuous
relationship that would last ten years. Later, she summarized her feelings at
the start of the liaison, "I knew that whatever came to pass--however wonderful
or painful, or both mixed together--it would be tremendously important." She
was to be the inspiration of many of Picasso's works, such as
La Femme-Fleur, and he in turn singularly
influenced her own artistic approach. After much hesitation, she finally broke
off their relationship in 1953. |
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In February 1961, with the collaboration of Carlton Lake, Gilot began
to write Life with Picasso (1964). While Lake was
considerably impressed with her recall of events, and even her memory for
dialogue, which he verified against documents and his own interviews with
Picasso, the reviews for the book when it came out in 1963 were ambivalent, if
not overwhelmingly negative. Although, Gilot was unusually frank about her life
with Picasso, she also did not spare herself in the process, which perhaps is
one reason why biographers have continued to rely on her work--albeit
reluctantly. While she dedicated the book "to Pablo," he tried to prohibit its
publication, losing all three lawsuits to that purpose. |
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In 1962, Gilot divorced Luc Simon, whom she had married in 1955, and
with whom she had a daughter. In 1970, she married Dr. Jonas Salk, the
discoverer of the polio vaccine. They remained together until his death in
1995. Gilot's artistic style continued to evolve after she broke with Picasso.
Later, she would attribute Matisse's use of color as being the greater
influence upon her creative process. She also authored Matisse and Picasso: A Friendship in Art (1990), among
other works. |
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Pablo Picasso
(1881-1973)
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Considered one of the greatest artists of the twentieth century, Pablo
Ruiz Picasso was born October 25, 1881 in Málaga, Spain. Son of the artist José
Ruiz Blasco (1838-1913), Picasso went on to adopt his mother's maiden name,
dropping Ruiz. Precociously gifted, at fourteen Picasso entered into the
prestigious Escuela de Bellas Artes in Barcelona where his father was a
teacher. |
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Around 1899, Picasso encountered his first important circle of
artist and writer friends at the café Els Quatre Gats. Notably, his friendship
with the poet and sculptor Jaime Sabartés, who later was to become his
secretary, dates from this period. After his first exhibition in Barcelona,
Picasso visited France for the first time, eventually settling there
permanently in 1904. |
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In Paris, Picasso moved into a studio in the now infamous
Bateau-Lavoir in Montmartre. The artists Juan Gris and Modigliani and the
avant-garde writers Max Jacob, André Salmon, Pierre Reverdy, and Pierre
MacOrlan also lived in the complex. His increasing circle of friends also
included Guillaume Apollinaire, Gertrude and Leo Stein, Georges Braque, and
Henri Matisse. Artistically, Picasso's style was evolving from his somber Blue
Period (1901-1904) to his Rose Period (1904-1905). Then in 1907, he painted the
critical work Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, which was
inspired by Primitivism, and presaged the advent of Cubism--the revolutionary
artistic movement created by Picasso and Braque. |
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Picasso was
simultaneously influenced by and a primary influence upon practically every
artistic and intellectual movement of the twentieth century, particularly
Surrealism. Gertrude Stein, Picasso's friend and patron, wrote of his work,
"His drawings were not of things seen but of things expressed, in short they
were words for him and drawing always was his only way of talking and he talks
a great deal." |
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Aside from the Blue Period, where his work commonly
depicted the poor and abandoned, Picasso's political statements in his art were
rare, yet powerful. In 1937, provoked by the aerial bombing of the village of
Guernica by Nationalists during the Spanish Civil War, Picasso created his
antiwar masterpiece of the same name. While not a member of the French
Resistance during World War II, Picasso did remain in Paris when many others
chose safety elsewhere. He did join the Communist Party in 1944, however, which
may have subsequently affected the market for his work; nevertheless, he
remained a member the rest of his life. |
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Picasso's biographer John
Richardson has noted, "Everything about Picasso is interesting. Even the most
trifling facts of his personal life turn out to be valuable clues which explain
his unpredictable changes of subject, style, or mood....If he acquires a new
mistress, her presence will at once be reflected in his work." Picasso's
personal life inspired so much of his art that connoisseurs cannot help but
acquaint themselves with the vagaries of his romantic relationships. His
comment on the subject was, "I paint the way some people write their
autobiography. The paintings, finished or not, are the pages of my journal, and
as such they are valid. The future will choose the pages it
prefers." |
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Picasso's considerable artistic output continued practically
unabated up to his death on April 8, 1973. While Picasso the public figure may
have suffered from the stereotypes that come with our modern
over-mediatization, some of which he encouraged, Picasso the artist's
posthumous reputation remains intact, particularly considering the enormous
impact his work has had on the development of twentieth century artistic
movements. |