![pablo picasso art pablo picasso art](https://static.picassomio.com/images/art/12/25/54/pablo-picasso-artwork-large-63095.jpg)
In paintings such as Portrait of Ambroise Vollard (1910) and Ma Jolie (1911–1912), human forms are almost unrecognisable, having been segmented into intersecting planes and lines. Picasso's subsequent stylistic changes can be found in his representation of human figures over the decades. While his close friends and the art world reacted negatively at first, Les Demoiselles d'Avignon came to be recognised for its radical departure from figurative painting-especially idealised female beauty-as it was understood by academic painting at the time. The artist also drew from the ancient Iberian sculpture he had seen at the Louvre and an African mask that his friend Henri Matisse owned. The profile of the figure on the left, for example, evokes ancient Egyptian portraiture. In 1907, he completed Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, a large oil painting featuring five naked women composed of bold shapes and simple, angular masses evocative of African art. Early examples include Portrait of Gertrude Stein (1905), in which Stein appears seated with a mask-like face.
![pablo picasso art pablo picasso art](https://www.biography.com/.image/t_share/MTE1ODA0OTcxNzU0MDk2MTQx/pablo-picasso-9440021-1-402.jpg)
Picasso also began to experiment with elements of ancient Iberian and African culture. One of his best-known paintings, Boy with a Pipe (1905) shows a lean boy dressed in blue, holding a pipe and wearing a garland behind him is an orange background with pink and white flowers. In the years known as the 'Rose Period' (1904–1906), he primarily painted with varieties of pink and moved to Montmartre, a district populated by entertainers. He often depicted his figures with elongated limbs and sombre expressions, not only adding to the blue tone of his works but also recalling the solemn saints found in El Greco's paintings.Īfter relocating to Paris in 1904, Picasso found better prospects, including the patronage of American art collector and writer Gertrude Stein. During the so-called 'Blue Period' (1901–1904), he portrayed subjects living on the margins of society-the poor, prostitutes, vagrants-with a palette of mainly blue, fostering an air of melancholy. Picasso left Spain for Paris in 1900, but returned not long after, visiting again for extended periods in 19. Despite his education, however, he was dissatisfied with the academic system, instead frequenting The Prado Museum to familiarise himself with the works of artists such as El Greco, Francisco Goya, Diego Velázquez, and Francisco de Zurbarán. Early paintings such as First Communion (1896), which depicts his sister Lola kneeling before the altar, reveal his mastery of perspective and lighting. By 1897, he had enrolled to study at the Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando in Madrid. His talent was recognised at an early age, leading him to be admitted to the Barcelona School of Fine Arts at 14. Born in 1881 in Málaga, Spain, Picasso learned drawing and painting from his father, who was also an artist.