News

Cubism 101 Pablo Picasso was born in Málaga, Spain in 1881. By age 23 he moved to Paris, then the art capital of Europe, where he found success fairly quickly.
Like one of his Cubist creations, Picasso would seem to have as many faces as his curators require. Despite several "Pierrot and Harlequin" (1920) by Pablo Picasso. Pen and black ink with gouache ...
Pablo Picasso, left: “Man with a Guitar” (1911–13); right: “Man with a Mandolin” (1911) Installation view of Picasso: A Cubist Commission in Brooklyn at the Metropolitan Museum of Art ...
And at Sotheby's last month, Picasso's "Femme à la Montre" ("Woman with a Watch") became the most expensive painting to be auctioned this year, selling for $139.4 million. But in the #MeToo era ...
On October 9, 1912, Pablo Picasso wrote a letter to Georges Braque, his confrere in Cubism, whom he later derided as “my wife” and who, for his part, described himself and Picasso as “two ...
Alain Moreau suggested that the mask long thought to be the painting's main influence was not in Europe until after the ...
‘Picasso and Braque: The Cubist Experiment, 1910-1912,’ seen already in Texas and now in California, shines light on the movement’s analytical phase. Call it Cubism 101, a primer on the ...
The exhibition: “Cubism and the Trompe l’Oeil Tradition” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, jointly organized by Emily Braun, curator of the Leonard A. Lauder Collection, and Elizabeth ...
Dateline: Paris, 1914. Picasso and his friend Georges Braque have invented this thing called Cubism. It was relatively unknown outside a small of group artists using the technique. So an exhibit was ...
Picasso and the Avant-Garde in Paris “Three Musicians,” one of the Picassos in the Philadelphia Museum of Art show that traces the development of Cubism.