Painting History / Schilderen (olie,acryl,aquarel)
Inhoud blog
  • 40 . Heinrich Hertz
  • 41 Heaviside
  • 38 Kirchoff
  • 39 Henry Joseph
  • 42 Fleming Ambrose
  • 43 Lee de Forest
  • 44. BASIC_Progs.
  • 1 Renaissance
  • 4 Dansen in de schilderkunst .
  • 5 Enkele van de honderden vrouwen die schilderden.
  • 6 Kunst bekijken en interpreteren .
  • 7 Impressionisme .
  • 10 Enkele grote meesters v.d. schilderkunst uit de 20igste eeuw .
  • 12 Het expressionisme .
  • 13 Surrealisme .
  • 3 Muziekinstrumenten
  • 8 Schilderkunst in de 18e eeuw.
  • 9 Schilderkunst in de 19e eeuw : De Romantiek .
  • 11 Abstracte Schilderkunst .
  • 14 Dadaisme
  • 15 Erotiek en naakt in de kunst . Deel I
  • 16 Een gering aantal schilderijen van grote meesters
  • 16 20e eeuw schilderijen
  • 18 Cyd Charisse ,danseres
  • 17 Boten en Schepen
  • 19 Jugendstil
  • 20 zonsondergangen / Sunsets
  • 21 Portretten
  • 23 Schelpen,kristallen en fossielen.
  • 22 Paarden
  • 26 Stillevens
  • 25 Landschappen en Maritiem
  • 24 Bloemen
  • 28 Molens en Vuurtorens+Onstaan van aarde en mens
  • 27 Enkele mooie schilderijen
  • 29 Kubisme
  • 30 Schilderijen van aquarel tentoonstellingen
  • 31 Tango + spaans
  • 32 Winter-landschappen
  • 34 cinema-affiches/movie-posters
  • 37 Radio Amateurs
  • 33 Rococo
  • 38 HITLER
  • 36 Fauvisme en Pointillisme
  • 47 Over mijn schilderijen
  • 2 Barok
  • 46 Grappig+mooi+muziek
  • Basic programma's
    Schilderen vanaf 1400 :Grote Meesters
    GEBRUIKSAANWIJZING: daal in de linkse kolom neer tot helemaal onderaan,en klik met de muis op een hoofdstuk dat U interesseert. Op de groene bladzijde die dan verschijnt,klik met de muis op de afbeelding bovenaan links.Dan kunt U een groot aantal schilderijen bekijken.Indien U niet zoudt uitkomen bij Uw keuze in de linkse kolom,daal dan in de hoofdkolom in het midden van de bladzijde naar beneden met de pijltjes uiterst rechts van het scherm,tot het gezochte gevonden is. HOW TO USE THIS SITE : choose a chapter in the left column by clicking on it with the mouse.On the green page which appears.click with the mouse on the image in the left corner above.You will be able to view a great number of paintings.If you would not find immediately the chosen item,then scroll down on the main page until you encounter your preference.
    26-04-2005
    Klik hier om een link te hebben waarmee u dit artikel later terug kunt lezen.29 Kubisme

    Kubisme

    Het kubisme begint in 1906-1907 met als pioniers Picasso
    en Braque .De vijandigheid die het kubisme wekte , is al
    een voldoende bewijs dat het hier om een revolutie in de
    kunst ging.Deze manier van schilderen werd in twijfel
    getrokken als ' misleidend '.

    Cezanne (een vriend van Renoir) wou de natuur bekijken in de vorm
    van cilinders , bollen en kegels , alles in het juiste perspectief ...
    Zijn waardering van ruimte,kleur en licht bij de heftige primitieve
    expressie in zijn werken,maakt indruk .Braque en Picasso onderzoeken dit Cezanisme en vernieuwen het .In 1906 vervangt Picasso een gezicht door
    een masker ,nadat hij Afrikaanse kunst had bekeken op een tentoonstelling.
    In 1907 schildert hij " les demoiselles d' Avignon (in feite ' tippelende '
    meisjes die hij in Barcelona heeft gezien), en hij drukt zijn bewondering
    uit voor ' het blauwe naakt ' van Matisse met zijn verwrongen lijnen en
    felle kleuren roze en blauw.Hij begint na Derain's werk te hebben bekeken
    aan een geometrische vlakindeling in een streven "helemaal opnieuw te beginnen ,waarbij men wel zal begrijpen wat ik bedoelde bij het schilderen".
    Zijn roze periode vloeit over in de beeldtaal van de " neger-maskers" die hij
    zelf  'een vorm van exorcisme ' noemt .Hij verlaat zijn levensgezellin ,de
    mooie Fernande Olivier,die hij verschillende keren schilderde,maar die niet
     in staat schijnt te zijn hem een kind te schenken.Picasso schildert nu
     ' 3 vrouwen ' en ' 5 vrouwen ' in waterverf en gouache op hout ,dus
    gemengde techniek in kleuren van oker tot bruin en groen tot blauw .
    Hij begint ook te beeldhouwen en etsen te maken . Braque,Picasso en Derain ,hebben elkaar vaak ontmoet.

    115              116               117               118                119

    Terwijl Braque analytisch,methodisch ,constructivistisch werkt ,blijft
    Picasso ge
    hecht aan primitivisme met sterke kontrasten.Hij begint nu ook landschappen te schilderen met simpele geometrische vormen , maar niet zo
     " gevuld met kubussen "
    (-> kubisme) ,driedimensionaal, als sommige werken
    van Braque ,die zich begint te concentreren op stillevens , "die hij in hun ruimte
    kan voelen " ,en ook op landschappen.Aangetrokken door muziek ,schildert hij
    ' hommage aan Johan Sebastian Bach','de klarinet ' ,' de vrouw met de guitaar (1913) ' , en ' de viool (1914)' .Tussen 1912 en 1924 leggen Picasso en Braque
    zich ook toe op het maken van collages van stillevens met onder meer stukjes behangpapier en lamellen hout , kranten-knipsels,stukjes spiegel ,die op een ondergrond geplakt werden, bijvoorbeeld in 'de guitaar en de klarinet ' uit 1918
    (als kubistische montage) .

    120        121        122          123          124         125      126     127      128

    In 1911 exposeert Picasso 83 tekeningen en aquarellen in een galerij in New
    York,
    voor het eerst zo ver in het buitenland ,terwijl hijzelf samen met Braque,
    de zomer
    doorbrengt in Céret .Hij wordt in New York als leider van de kubisten aanzien,met een intuitieve,spontane uitdrukkingswijze, ,meer dan Delaunay ,
    Léger(1881-1955), Juan Gris (1887-1927) ,en de reeds hierboven vernoemden ,
    en volgelingen die
    ' krachteloze imitaties voortbrengen ' in tegenstelling tot ' de kreatieve spanning die met intensiteit de nieuwe ruimte op doek materialiseert'.

    Picasso keert na Céret ,terug naar Parijs en leert er Eva Gouel kennen,die hij prompt schildert ,een felle , betoverende verschijning ,geheel anders dan de evenwichtige Fernande die uit zijn leven verdwijnt , en na publicatie van haar memoires over haarzelf en Picasso ,sterft in 1966. Picasso zal na haar nog 6
    andere minnaressen als model kennen , tot op een hoge leeftijd .

    ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Naschrift :
    Pablo Picasso's Love: La Femme-Fleur .

     

          As originally published in
          The Atlantic Monthly
          August 1964
          Pablo Picasso's Love: La Femme-Fleur
          The love affair between Pablo Picasso, aged 61, and Françoise Gilot, 21,
          began in Paris in the spring of 1943 during the German occupation of
          France. She was a student of art, the only child of a domineering father
          who brought her up as if she had been his son. In her mood of rebellion
          she found in Picasso a gentleness and depth of understanding she had not
          known in any other man. They were to live together for the next ten years;
          she was to bear him two children. Their relationship forms the substance
          of a new book, LIFE WITH PICASSO, to be published this winter by
          McGraw-Hill. This excerpt is taken from the opening part.

          by Françoise Gilot and Carlton Lake

          I met Pablo Picasso in May, 1943, during the German occupation of France.
          I was twenty-one, and I felt already that painting was my whole life. At
          that time I had as houseguest an old school friend named Geneviève, who
          had come up from her home near Montpellier, in the south of France, to
          spend a month with me. With her and the actor Alain Cuny, I went to have
          dinner one Wednesday at a small restaurant then much frequented by
          painters and writers. It was called Le Catalan and was in the Rue des
          Grands-Augustins on the Left Bank, near Notre Dame.
          Return to Flashback: Portraits of Picasso When we got there that evening
          and were seated, I saw Picasso for the first time. He was at the next
          table with a group of friends: a man, whom I didn't recognize, and two
          women. One of the women I knew to be Marie-Laure, Vicomtesse de
          Noailles, the owner of an important collection of paintings, who is
           now   something of  a painter herself. At that time, though she had
           not yet taken up painting -- at least publicly -- but she had written a
           poetic little book called  The Tower of Babel.
           She had a long, narrow, somewhat decadent-looking face
          framed by an ornate coiffure that reminded me of Rigaud's portrait of
          Louis XIV in the Louvre.
          The other woman, Alain Cuny whispered to me, was Dora Maar, a Yugoslav
          photographer and painter, who, as everyone knew, had been Picasso's
          companion since 1936. Even without his help I would have had no trouble
          identifying her, because I knew Picasso's work well enough to recognize
          that this was the woman who was shown in the Portrait of D . . . M . . .
          in its many forms and variants. She had a beautiful oval face but a heavy
          jaw, which is a characteristic trait of almost all the portraits Picasso
          has made of her. Her hair was black and pulled back in a severe, starkly
          dramatic coiffure. I noticed her intense bronze-green eyes, and her
          slender hands with their long, tapering fingers. The most remarkable thing
          about her was her extraordinary immobility. She talked little, made no
          gestures at all, and there was something in her bearing that was more than
          dignity -- a certain rigidity. There is a French expression that is very
          apt: she carried herself like the holy sacrament.
          I was a little surprised at Picasso's appearance. My impression of what he
          ought to look like had been founded on the photograph by Man Ray in the
          special Picasso number of the art review Cahiers d'Art published in 1936:
          dark hair, bright, flashing eyes, very squarely built, rugged -- a
          handsome animal. When I saw him now, with his hair graying to white,
          and with an absent look -- either distracted or bored -- he had a withdrawn,
          oriental appearance that reminded me of the statue of the Egyptian scribe
          in the Louvre. There was nothing sculptural or fixed in his manner of
          moving, however; he gesticulated, he twisted and turned, he got up, he
          moved rapidly back and forth.
          As the meal went on I noticed Picasso watching us, and from time to time
          acting a bit for our benefit. It was evident that he recognized Cuny, and
          he made remarks that we were obviously supposed to overhear. Whenever
          he said something particularly amusing, he smiled at us rather than just at
          his dinner companions. Finally he got up and came over to our table. He
          brought with him a bowl of cherries and offered some to all of us, in his
          strong Spanish accent calling them cerisses, with a soft, double-s sound.
          Geneviève was a very beautiful girl, of French Catalan ancestry but a
          Grecian type, with a nose that was a direct prolongation of her forehead.
          It was a head, Picasso later told me, that he felt he had already painted
          in his work of the Ingresque or Roman period. She often accentuated that
          Grecian quality, as she did that evening, by wearing a flowing, pleated
          dress.
          "Well, Cuny," Picasso said. "Are you going to introduce me to your
          friends?" Cuny introduced us and then said, "Françoise is the intelligent
          one." Pointing to Geneviève, he said, "She's the beautiful one. Isn't she
          just like an Attic marble?"
          Picasso shrugged. "You talk like an actor," he said. "How would you
          characterize the intelligent one?"
          That evening I was wearing a green and brown turban that covered much of
          my brow and my cheeks. Geneviève answered his question.
          "Françoise is a Florentine virgin," she said.
          "But not the usual kind," Cuny said. "A secularized virgin." Everybody
          laughed.
          "All the more interesting if she's not the ordinary kind," Picasso said.
          "But what do they do, your two refugees from the history of art?"
          "We're painters," Geneviève answered.
          Picasso burst out laughing. "That's the funniest thing I've heard all day.
          Girls who look like that can't be painters." I told him that Geneviève was
          only on holiday in Paris and that she was a pupil of Maillol in Banyuls,
          and that although I wasn't anybody's pupil, I was very much a painter. In
          fact, I said, we were having a joint exhibition of paintings and drawings
          right at the moment in a gallery in the Rue Boissy d'Anglas, behind the
          Place de la Concorde.
          Picasso looked down at us in mock surprise. "Well, I'm a painter, too," he
          said. "You must come to my studio and see some of my paintings."
          "When?" I asked him.
          "Tomorrow. The next day. When you want to."
          Geneviève and I compared notes. We told him we'd come not tomorrow, not
          the next day, but perhaps the first of the next week. Picasso bowed. "As
          you wish," he said. He shook hands all around, picked up his bowl of
          cherries, and went back to his table.


          THE following Monday morning, about eleven o'clock, Geneviève and I
          climbed a dark, narrow, winding staircase hidden away in a corner of the
          cobblestone courtyard at 7 Rue des Grands Augustins and knocked on the
          door of Picasso's apartment. After a long wait it was opened about three
          or four inches, and the pointed nose of his secretary, Jaime Sabartés,
          came through. We had never seen him before, but we knew who he was.
          We had seen reproductions of drawings Picasso had made of him, and
          Cuny had told us that Sabartés would be the one who received us. He
           looked at us  rather  suspiciously and asked, "Do you have an appoint-
           ment?" I said we did. He  let us in. He looked anxious as he peered  
           out from behind his thick-lensed glasses.
          We entered an anteroom where there were many plants and birds: turtle-
          doves and a number of exotic species in wicker cages. The plants were not
          pretty; they were the spiky green ones you see frequently in copper pots
          in a concierge's loge. Here they were arranged more appealingly, though,
          and in front of the high open window they made a rather pleasing effect. I
          had seen one of those plants a month before in a recent portrait of Dora
          Maar that was hung -- in spite of the Nazi ban on Picasso's work -- in an
          out-of-the-way alcove of the Louise Leiris gallery in the Rue d'Astorg. It
          was a magnificent portrait, in pink and gray. In the background of the
          picture there was a framework of panels like the panes of the large
          antique window I now saw, a cage of birds, and one of those spiky plants.
          From that room we followed Sabartés into a second one, which was very
          long. I saw several old Louis XIII sofas and chairs and, spread out on
          them, guitars, mandolins, and other musical instruments which, I supposed,
          Picasso must have used in his painting during the Cubist period. He later
          told me that he had bought them after he painted the pictures, not before,
          and kept them there now as a kind of remembrance of his Cubist days. The
          room had noble proportions, but everything was at sixes and sevens. The
          long table that stretched out before us and two long carpenter's tables,
          one after the other against the right-hand wall, were covered with an
          accumulation of book, magazines, newspapers, photographs, hats, and
          miscellaneous clutter. On top of one of these tables was a rough piece of
          amethyst crystal, about the size of a human head. In the center of it was
          a small, totally enclosed cavity filled with what appeared to be water. On
          a shelf underneath it I saw several men's suits folded up and three or
          four pairs of old shoes.
          As we walked past the long table in the center of the room, I noticed that
          Sabartés moved out around a dull brownish object lying on the floor, near
          the door that led into the next room. When I came closer to it, I saw that
          it was a sculpture of a skull cast in bronze.
          The next room we went into was a studio almost entirely filled with
          sculptures. I saw The Man With the Sheep, now cast in bronze and standing
          in the square at Vallauris, but at that time simply in plaster. Then there
          were a number of large heads of women that Picasso had done at Boisgeloup
          in 1932. There was a wild disorder of bicycle handlebars, rolls of canvas,
          a fifteenth-century Spanish polychromed wooden Christ, and a weird and
          spindly sculpture of a woman holding an apple in one hand and what looked
          like a hot-water bottle in the other arm.
          What hit me hardest, though, was a glowing canvas by Matisse, a still life
          of 1912, with a bowl of oranges on a pink tablecloth against a light
          ultramarine and brighter pink background. I remember also a Vuillard, a
          Douanier Rousseau, and a Modigliani, but above all, in that shadowy
          studio, the glow of color of the Matisse was particularly striking among
          the sculptures. I couldn't prevent myself from saying, "Oh, what a
          beautiful Matisse." Sabartés turned around and said austerely, "Here there
          is only Picasso."


          BY ANOTHER little winding staircase, on the far side of the room, we
          climbed to the second floor of Picasso's apartments. Upstairs the ceiling
          was much lower. We passed into a large studio. On the other side of the
          room I saw Picasso, surrounded by a group of six or eight. He was dressed
          in an old pair of trousers that hung loosely from his hips, and a
          blue-striped sailor's jersey. When he saw us, his face lighted up in a
          pleasant smile. He left the group and came over to us. Sabartés muttered
          something about our having an appointment and then went downstairs.
          "Would you like me to show you around?" Picasso asked. We said we would
          indeed. We hoped he would show us some of his paintings, but we didn't
          dare ask. He took us back downstairs into the sculpture studio.
          "Before I came here," he said, "this lower floor was used as a workshop by
          a weaver, and the upper floor was an actor's studio -- Jean-Louis
          Barrault's. It was here, in this very room, that I painted Guernica." He
          settled back onto one of the Louis XIII tables in front of a pair of
          windows that looked out onto an interior courtyard. "Other than that,
          though, I hardly ever work in this room. I did L'Homme au Mouton here,"
          he said, pointing to the large plaster sculpture of the man holding the sheep
          in his arms, "but I do my painting upstairs, and I generally work on my
          sculpture in another studio I have a little way up the street.
          "That covered spiral stairway you walked up to get here," he said, "is the
          one the young painter in Balzac's Le Chef-d'oeuvre inconnu climbed when he
          came to see old Pourbus, the friend of Poussin who painted pictures nobody
          understood. Oh, the whole place is full of historical and literary ghosts.
          Well, let's get back upstairs," he said. He slid off the table, and we
          followed him up the winding staircase. He took us through the big studio,
          around the group of people, none of whom looked up at us as we passed
          through, and into a small room in the far corner.
          "This is where I do my engraving," he said. "And look here." He walked
          over to a sink and turned on a faucet. After a while the water became
          steamy. "Isn't it marvelous," he said. "In spite of the war, I have hot
          water. In fact," he added, "you could come here and have a hot bath any
          time you liked."
          About one o'clock the group around us broke up, and everyone started to
          leave. The thing that struck me as most curious that first day was the
          fact that Sabartés was obviously a kind of monk of the Picasso religion,
          and all the people who were there had the air of being completely immersed
          in that religion except the one to whom it was addressed. He seemed to be
          taking it all for granted but not attaching any importance to it, as if he
          were trying to show us that he didn't have any desire to be the central
          figure in a cult.
          As we turned to go, Picasso said, "If you want to come back again, by all
          means come. But if you do come, don't come like pilgrims to Mecca. Come
          because you like me, because you find my company interesting, and because
          you want to have a simple, direct relationship with me. If you only want
          to see my paintings, you'd better go to a museum."
          I didn't take that remark of his too seriously. In the first place, there
          were almost no paintings of his to be seen in any of the Paris museums at
          that time. Then, too, since he was on the Nazi list of proscribed
          painters, no private gallery was able to show his work openly or in
          quantity. And looking at another painter's work in a book of reproductions
          is no satisfaction for a painter. So if anyone wanted to see more of his
          work -- as I did -- there was almost nowhere to go except 7 Rue des
          Grands-Augustins.
          A few days after that first visit I dropped in at the gallery where
          Geneviève and I were having our exhibition. The woman who ran it told me
          excitedly that a little earlier a short man with piercing dark eyes,
          wearing a blue-and-white-striped sailor's jersey, had come in. She had
          realized, after the first shock, that he was Picasso. He had studied the
          paintings intently and then walked out without saying anything, she told
          me. When I got home, I told Geneviève about his visit. I said he had
          probably gone to see how bad our paintings were and prove to himself the
          truth of what he had said when he met us at Le Catalan: "Girls who look
          like that can't be painters."
          Geneviève took a more idealistic view of it. "I think it's a nice human
          touch," she said. "It shows he takes a real interest in young artists'
          work."
          I wasn't convinced. At best it was curiosity, I felt. "He just wanted to
          see what we had inside -- if anything."
          "Oh, you're so cynical," she said. "He seemed to me very kind,
          open-minded, and simple."
          I told her I thought he perhaps wanted to appear simple, but I had looked
          into those eyes of his and seen something quite different. It hadn't
          frightened me, though. In fact it made me want to go back. I temporized
          for about another week and then, one morning, with Geneviève in tow,
          returned to the Rue des Grands-Augustins. It was Sabartés, of course, who
          opened the door for us again, sticking his head outside like a little sand
          fox. This time he admitted us without comment.
          Remembering from our first visit the very pleasant entrance with its many
          plants and exotic birds in wicker cages lighted by the high window, we had
          decided to add a little color to the greenery, and so we arrived carrying
          a pot of cineraria. When Picasso saw us he laughed.
          "Nobody brings flowers to an old gent," he said. Then he noticed that my
          dress was the same color as the blossoms, or vice versa. "You think of
          everything, I can see that," he said. I pushed Geneviève in front of me.
          "Here's beauty, followed by intelligence," I reminded him.
          He looked us over carefully, then said, "That remains to be seen. What I
          see now are simply two very different types of beauty: archaic Greece and
          Jean Goujon."
          On our first visit he had shown us only a few pictures. This time he made
          up for it. He piled them up almost like a scaffolding. There was a
          painting on the easel; he stuck another on top of that, one on each side,
          piled others on top of those, until it seemed like a highly skilled
          balancing act of the human-pyramid kind. As I found out later, he used to
          arrange them that way almost every day. They always held together by some
          kind of miracle, but as soon as anyone else touched them, they came
          tumbling down. That morning there were cocks, a buffet of Le Catalan with
          cherries against a background of brown, black, and white: small still
          lifes, some with lemon and many with glasses, a cup, and a coffeepot, or
          with fruit, against a checked tablecloth. He seemed to be playing with
          colors as he sorted them out and tossed them up onto the scaffolding.
          There was a large nude, a three-quarter rear view that one saw at the same
          time front view, in earth tones, very close to the palette of the Cubist
          period. There were also scenes of the Vert Galant, that little tip of the
          Ile de la Cite on the other side of the Pont Neuf. In these paintings
          there were trees on which each branch was made out of separate spots of
          paint, much in the manner of Van Gogh. There were several showing mothers
          with enormous children whose heads, reached the very top of the canvas,
          somewhat in the spirit of the Catalan primitives.
          Many of the paintings he showed us that morning had a culinary basis:
          skinned rabbits, or pigeons with peas, a kind of reflection of the hard
          time most people were having to get food. There were others almost like
          papiers collés, with a sausage stuck onto an otherwise carefully composed
          background; or portraits of women wearing hats topped with forks or fishes
          and other kinds of food. Finally he showed us a group of portraits of Dora
          Maar, very tortured in form, which he had painted over the past two years.
          They are among the finest paintings he has ever done, I believe.
          Suddenly he decided he had shown us enough He walked away from his
          pyramid. "I saw your exhibition," he said, looking at me. I didn't have
          the courage to ask him what he thought of it, so I just looked surprised.
          "You're very gifted for drawing," he went on. "I think you should keep on
          working -- hard -- every day. I'll be curious to see how your work
          develops. I hope you'll show me other things from time to time." Then he
          added, to Geneviève, "I think you've found the right teacher in Maillol.
          One good Catalan deserves another."
          Little else he said that morning registered very deeply with me. I left
          the Rue des Grands-Augustin feeling very buoyant, impatient to get back to
          my studio and go to work.


          SOON after that second visit, Geneviève went back to the Midi. I wanted to
          return to the Rue des Grands-Augustins by myself, but I felt it was a
          little early to show Picasso any new work, even though he had been more
          than cordial in his invitation to come see him as often as I wanted to. I
          wondered more than once whether, if he had met me alone, he would even
          have noticed me. Meeting me with Geneviève, he saw a theme that runs
          through his entire work and was particularly marked during the 1930s: two
          women together, one fair and the other dark, the one all curves and the
          other externalizing her internal conflicts, with a personality that goes
          beyond the pictorial; one, the kind of woman who has a purely aesthetic
          and plastic life with him; the other, the type whose nature is reflected
          in dramatic expression. When he saw the two of us that morning, he saw in
          Geneviève a version of formal perfection, and in me, who lacked that
          formal perfection, a quality of unquiet which was actually an echo of his
          own nature. That created an image for him, I'm sure. He even said, "I'm
          meeting beings I painted twenty years ago." It was certainly one of the
          original causes of the interest he showed.
          When I did go back to see him, it wasn't long before he began to make very
          clear another side of the nature of his interest in me.
          There were always quite a few people waiting to see him, some in the long
          room on the lower floor, where Sabartés held forth, others in the large
          painting atelier on the floor above. Picasso, I soon noticed, was always
          looking for some excuse to get me off into another room where he could be
          alone with me for a few minutes. The first time, I remember, the pretext
          was some tubes of paint he wanted to give me. Having an idea that there
          was more involved than just paints, I asked him why he didn't bring them
          to me. Sabartés, never very far away, said, "Yes, Pablo, you should bring
          them to her."
          "Why?" Picasso asked. "If I'm going to give her a gift, the least she can
          do is make the effort to go after it."
          Another morning, I had gone there on my bicycle, since that was the only
          way one could get around conveniently at that period. En route it had
          started to rain, and my hair was soaking wet. "Just look at the poor
          girl," Picasso said to Sabartés. "We can't leave her in that state." He
          took me by the arm. "You come with me into the bathroom and let me dry
          your hair," he said .
          "Look, Pablo," Sabartés said, "perhaps I should get Inès to do it. She'll
          do it better."
          "You leave Inès where she is," Picasso said. "She's got her own work to
          do." He guided me into the bathroom and carefully dried my hair for me.
          Of course, Picasso didn't have a situation like that handed to him every
          time. He had to manufacture his own. And so the next time it might be some
          special drawing paper he had uncovered in one of the countless dusty
          corners of the atelier. But whatever the pretext, it was quite clear that
          he was trying to discover to what degree I might be receptive to his
          attentions. I had no desire to give him grounds to make up his mind, one
          way or the other. I was having too much fun watching him to figure it all
          out.
          One day he said to me, "I want to show you my museum." He took me into
          a  small room adjoining the sculpture studio. Against the left-hand wall was
          a glass case about seven feet high, five feet wide, and a foot deep. It
          had four or five shelves and held many different kinds of art objects.
          "These are my treasures," he said. He led me over to the center of the
          vitrine and pointed to a very striking wooden foot on one of the shelves.
          "That's Old Kingdom," he said. "There's all of Egypt in that foot. With a
          fragment like that, I don't need the rest of the statue."
          Ranged across the top shelf were about ten very slender sculptures of
          women, from a foot to a foot and a half high, cast in bronze. "Those I
          carved in wood in 1931," he said. "And look over here." He pushed me
           very gently toward the end of the case and tapped on the glass in front of a
          group of small stones incised with female profiles, the head of a bull and
          of a faun. "I did those with this," he said, and fished out of his pocket
          a small jackknife, labeled "Opinel," with a single folding blade. On
          another shelf, and next to a wooden hand and forearm that were
          recognizably Easter Island, I noticed a small flat piece of bone about
          three inches long. On its long sides were painted parallel lines imitating
          the teeth of a comb. In the center, between the two strips of "teeth," was
          a cartouche showing two bugs meeting in head-on combat, one about to
          swallow up the other. I asked Picasso what that was. "That's a comb for
          lice," he said. "I'd give it to you but I don't imagine you'd have any use
          for it." He ran his fingers through my hair and parted it at the roots
          here and there. "No," he said, "you seem to be all right in that
          department."
          I moved back to the center of the vitrine. There was a cast of his
          sculpture A Glass of Absinthe, about nine inches high, with a hole cut
          into the front of the glass and a real spoon on top, bearing a simulated
          lump of sugar. "I did that long before you were born," he said. "Back in
          1914. I modeled it in wax and added a real spoon and had six of them cast
          in bronze, then painted each one differently. Here, this will amuse you."
          He put his arm around me and sidled over to another part of the case,
          drawing me along with him. I saw a small matchbox on which he had
           painted the head of a woman in a post-Cubist manner. I asked him
           when he had done that.
          "Oh, two or three years ago," he said. "These, too." He pointed to a group
          of cigarette boxes on which he had painted women seated in armchairs.
          Three of them, I noticed, were dated 1940. "You see, I built them up in
          relief by pasting other bits of cardboard in various places," he said. He
          pointed to the one in the center. "For that one, I sewed on the panel that
          makes the central part of the torso. Notice the hair. It's pretty close to
          being hair -- it's string. These things are midway between sculpture and
          painting, I suppose."
          On the opposite side of the room from the vitrine was a table covered with
          tools. I walked over to it. Picasso followed me. "These I use in finishing
          my sculpture," he said. He picked up a file. "This is something I use all
          the time." He tossed it back and picked up another. "This one is for finer
          surfaces." One after another he handled a plane, pincers, nails of all
          kinds -- "for engraving on plaster" -- a hammer, and with each one he came
          closer to me. When he dropped the last piece back onto the table he turned
          abruptly and kissed me, full on the mouth. I let him. He looked at me in
          surprise.
          "You don't mind?" he asked. I said no -- should I? He seemed shocked.
          "That's disgusting," he said. "At least you could have pushed me away.
          Otherwise I might get the idea I could do anything I wanted to." I smiled
          and told him to go ahead. By now he was thrown completely off the track.
          I  knew very well he didn't know what he wanted to do, or even whether,
          and I had an idea that by saying, placidly, yes, I would discourage him from
          doing anything at all, so I said, "I'm at your disposition." He looked at
          me cautiously, then asked, "Are you in love with me?" I said I couldn't
          guarantee that, but at least I liked him and I felt very much at ease with
          him, and I saw no reason for setting up in advance any limits to our
          relationship. Again he said, "That's disgusting. How do you expect me to
          seduce anyone under conditions like that? If you're not going to resist --
          well, then it's out of the question. I'll have to think it over." And he
          walked back into the sculpture studio to join the others.


          A FEW days later he brought up the question in a similar manner. I told
          him I could promise him nothing in advance, but he could always try and
          see for himself. That nettled him. "In spite of your youth," he said, "I
          get the impression that you've had a lot of experience in that sort of
          thing." I said no, not really. "Well, then, I don't understand you," he
          said. "It doesn't make sense, the way you act." I said I couldn't help
          that. That's the way it was, sense or nonsense. Besides, I wasn't afraid
          of him, so I couldn't very well act as though I were. "You're too
          complicated for me," he said. That slowed him down for a while longer.
          A week or so later, I went to see him. Using the by now familiar
          technique, he managed to maneuver me into his bedroom. He picked up
          a book  from a pile on a chair near his bed. "Have you read the 
          Marquis de Sade?"  he asked me. I told him no. "Aha! I shock you,
          don't I?" he said, looking  very proud of himself. I said no. I told
          him that although I hadn't read  Sade, I had no objection to it.
          And I had read Choderlos de Laclos and  Restif de Bretonne.
          As for Sade, I could make out without it but perhaps  he couldn't,
           I suggested. In any case, I told him, the principle of the victim
           and the executioner didn't interest me. I didn't think either one
          of those roles suited me very well.
          "No, no, I didn't mean that," he said. "I just wondered if that might
          shock you." He seemed a little disappointed. "You're more English than
          French, I think," he told me. "You've got the English kind of reserve."
          After that his campaign slacked off. He was less friendly whenever I
          dropped in mornings, but since I hadn't encouraged his early approaches,
           I was clearly hesitant about attempting further advances. I was just as well
           pleased.
          One morning toward the end of June, he told me he wanted to show me the
          view from the "forest." In French that word is used to refer to the
          framework of beams that come together to form the support for the roof.
          He  took me into the hallway outside his painting studio on the upper floor.
          There, at an angle against the wall, was a miller's ladder leading up to a
          small door about three feet above our heads. He bowed gallantly. "You go
          first, he said. I had some qualms about it, but it seemed awkward to argue
          the point, so I climbed the ladder and he followed right behind. At the
          top I pushed open the door and stepped into a small room, about twelve
          feet by twenty, under the eaves. On the other side of the room was a small
          open window, almost to the floor. I walked over to it and looked out on a
          kind of Cubist pattern formed by the roofs and chimney pots of the Left
          Bank. Picasso came up behind me and put his arms around me. "I'd better
          hold onto you," he said. "I wouldn't like to have you fall out and give
          the house a bad name." It had grown warmer in the last few days, and he
          was wearing what seemed to be his usual warm-weather outfit for receiving
          his friends in the morning: a pair of white shorts and his slippers.
          "That's nice, the roofs of Paris," he said. "One could make paintings of
          that." I continued to look out the window. Opposite us, a little to the
          right across a courtyard, an empty building was being remodeled. On one of
          the outside walls, a workman had drawn in whitewash an enormous phallus,
          about seven feet long, with very baroque subsidiary decoration. Picasso
          went on talking about the view and the handsome old roofs against light
          gray-blue of the sky. He moved his hands up and lightly cupped them over
          my breasts. I didn't move. Finally, a bit too innocently I thought, he
          said, "Tiens! That drawing in whitewash on the wall over there -- what do
          you suppose that represents?" Trying to sound as offhand as he had, I said
          I didn't know. It didn't seem to me to be at all figurative, I told him.


          Portraits of Picasso.


          Copyright © 1964 by Françoise Gilot and Carlton Lake. All rights reserved.
          Originally published in The Atlantic Monthly, August 1964. Volume 214, no.
          2 (pages 79 - 84).
          Permission to post granted by Watkins/Loomis agency, 1996.

     

     

     

     


     



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