Wednesday, January 22, 2020
Pablo Ruiz Picassos Guernica :: Visual Arts Paintings Art
Pablo Ruiz Picasso's Guernica    He was born in Malaga, Spain on October the twenty-fifth 1881 to Don   Jose Ruiz Blascoand Dona Maria Picasso y Lopez. In 1897 Pablo was   admitted to the Royal Academy of San Fernando, following in his   father's foot steps tobecome an artist. During his life he painted   many famous pieces however the 'Guernica' is arguably his best and   most meaningful painting. After living a full life and having three   children, he finally passed away on April the eighth at his villa in   Mougins.    In 1917, Picasso did the set and costume design for Serge Diaghilev's  ballet "Parade." This contact with the theater world, as well as a  trip to Italy, brought him back to figurative painting with a new  interest in characters from the Italian comedy. He alternated this  interest with his investigation into cubism. During the 1920s, Picasso  continued to design theatre sets and painted in Cubist, Classical and  Surreal modes. In late April of 1937, after hearing news of the  saturation bombing of the civilian target of Guernica, Spain by the  Nazi Luftwaffe, Picasso responded with his great anti-war painting,  "Guernica."    On April 26th 1937, a massive air raid by the German Luftwaffe on the  Basque town of Guernica in Northern Spain shocked the world. Hundreds  of civilians were killed in the raid which became a major incident of  the Spanish Civil War. The bombing prompted Picasso to begin painting  his greatest masterpiece... Guernica. The painting became a timely and  prophetic vision of the Second World War and is now recognised as an  international icon for peace.    Despite the enormous interest the painting generated in his lifetime,  Picasso obstinately refused to explain Guernica's imagery. Guernica  has been the subject of more books than any other work in modern art  and it is often described as..."the most important work of art of the  twentieth century", yet its meanings have to this day eluded some of  the most renowned scholars.    The preoccupying theme of Guernica is of course death; reinforcing  this, in the centre of the painting is a hidden skull which dominates  the viewer's subliminal impressions. The skull is shown sideways and  has been ingeniously overlaid onto the body of the horse, which is  also a death symbol. The skull's mechanical appearance seems  appropriate to the modern weaponry used in the 1937 bombing. Picasso  often hid one or more related symbols within a particular image as    					  Pablo Ruiz Picasso's Guernica  ::  Visual Arts Paintings Art  Pablo Ruiz Picasso's Guernica    He was born in Malaga, Spain on October the twenty-fifth 1881 to Don   Jose Ruiz Blascoand Dona Maria Picasso y Lopez. In 1897 Pablo was   admitted to the Royal Academy of San Fernando, following in his   father's foot steps tobecome an artist. During his life he painted   many famous pieces however the 'Guernica' is arguably his best and   most meaningful painting. After living a full life and having three   children, he finally passed away on April the eighth at his villa in   Mougins.    In 1917, Picasso did the set and costume design for Serge Diaghilev's  ballet "Parade." This contact with the theater world, as well as a  trip to Italy, brought him back to figurative painting with a new  interest in characters from the Italian comedy. He alternated this  interest with his investigation into cubism. During the 1920s, Picasso  continued to design theatre sets and painted in Cubist, Classical and  Surreal modes. In late April of 1937, after hearing news of the  saturation bombing of the civilian target of Guernica, Spain by the  Nazi Luftwaffe, Picasso responded with his great anti-war painting,  "Guernica."    On April 26th 1937, a massive air raid by the German Luftwaffe on the  Basque town of Guernica in Northern Spain shocked the world. Hundreds  of civilians were killed in the raid which became a major incident of  the Spanish Civil War. The bombing prompted Picasso to begin painting  his greatest masterpiece... Guernica. The painting became a timely and  prophetic vision of the Second World War and is now recognised as an  international icon for peace.    Despite the enormous interest the painting generated in his lifetime,  Picasso obstinately refused to explain Guernica's imagery. Guernica  has been the subject of more books than any other work in modern art  and it is often described as..."the most important work of art of the  twentieth century", yet its meanings have to this day eluded some of  the most renowned scholars.    The preoccupying theme of Guernica is of course death; reinforcing  this, in the centre of the painting is a hidden skull which dominates  the viewer's subliminal impressions. The skull is shown sideways and  has been ingeniously overlaid onto the body of the horse, which is  also a death symbol. The skull's mechanical appearance seems  appropriate to the modern weaponry used in the 1937 bombing. Picasso  often hid one or more related symbols within a particular image as    					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.