Picasso
In Málaga, Spain, on October 25, 1881, Pablo Picasso was born, he later passed away at the age of 91 on April 8, 1973, in Mougins, France. Doña Maria Picasso y Lopez was Pablo's mother and his father was Don José Ruiz Blasco who also happened to be a painter. When Picasso was young he enrolled in a local art academy where his father would become the professor of drawing. In 1900 his artwork consisted of paintings of many prostitutes and clowns in terms of blue, this is known as his “Blue Period”. Picasso eventually moved to Paris, France where he began his “Rose Period” in which he began to paint his artwork with much warmer colors. In 1907 Picasso helped engineer an artistic style called cubism with fellow artist Georges Braque. He became part …show more content…
The Germans bombed the unaware and defenseless small town of Guernica on April 28, 1937, obliterating the town and its citizens. Pablo Picasso, a Spaniard, was absolutely outraged by this presentation of absolute obstruction of power. Picasso’s iconography of the horror and destruction the air raid the German military forces sent to the helpless town is remarkable. He uses cubism where “objects are broken apart and reassembled in an abstracted form, highlighting their composite geometric shapes and depicting them from multiple, simultaneous viewpoints in order to create physics-defying, collage-like effects,” biography.com explains.
De Goya Francisco De Goya was born on March 30, 1746, Fuendetodos, Spain. “Goya began his studies in Zaragoza with José Luzán y Martínez, a local artist trained in Naples, and was later a pupil, in Madrid, of the court painter Francisco Bayeu,” Britannica.com