Reseña del editor:
A Life of Picasso magnificently combines meticulous scholarship with irrestible narrative appeal. John Richardson draws on his close friendship with Picasso, his own diaries, with the collaboration of picasso's widow Jacqueline, and unprecedented access to his studio and papers to arrive at a profound understanding of the artist and his work. He has distilled a lifetime's study into a book that is monumental, enthralling and perceptive - at last, an account of the artist's life that is worthy of its subject.
Volume I sheds new light on Picasso's innovations, obsessions and influences and reveals how his art and life were inextricably bound together. It explores his Spanish roots: his intensely Andalusian nature, his adolescence in Corunna and Madrid and his passion for Barcelona, where he became the hero of Catalan 'modernisme'. It chronicles his formative early years in Paris and his complex relationships with Apollinaire, Max jacob and Gertrude Stein during the Blue and Rose periods. At the end of the book we see Picasso already poised to become the messiah of modern art, ready to develop into one of the great artist of the twentieth century.
Biografía del autor:
John Richardson was born in 1924. He studied art at the Slade School. In 1949 he moved to Southern France, where he and Douglas Cooper, the collector, bought and transformed the Chateau de Castille near Avignon into a private museum of cubist painting. For the next ten years he lived in France, where he became a friend of Picasso, Braque, Leger and Cocteau, and embarked on an analytical study of Picasso's work, now part of this biography.
In the early 1960s Richardson went to live in New York, where was appointed head of Christie's. He organised various exhibitions, including a major Picasso retrospective in 1962. He is the author of books on Manet and Braque and is a contributor to The New York Review of Books and Vanity Fair.
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