Nicolo picasso biography

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  • A Life of Picasso IV: The Minotaur Years:
    Part of the value of Richardson’s work on Picasso—this final volume, published two years after his death in , is the fourth in his biography of the artist—is his painstaking examination of evidence, taking no one, least of all Picasso, at their word There are times in Richardson’s book when he is too anxious to join Picasso in his view of the women in his life, referring, for example, to Olga on the very first page as 'a termagant' and insisting on the very last page that Dora Maar, a later lover, 'thrived on punishment.' Still, one of the reasons why Richardson’s life of Picasso is essential is that he is always willing to seek biographical sources for Picasso’s images. He leaves it to the reader to conclude that many of the paintings that are filled with hatred are not among Picasso’s best, that the tensions and high emotions that poisoned his personal life are sometimes too graphically apparent in them, with no

    "Museums are just a lot of lies, and the people who make art their business are mostly impostors."

    "There have been all sorts and manner of artists, from the uncouth Richard Wagner, who gave us sublime music and was probably one of the meanest and most despicable characters that ever lived, to Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, who also gave us sublime music and left behind a reputation for gentleness and charm and unselfish generosity that may have been equalled but never surpassed bygd the saints themselves."

    Hendrik Willem Van Loon, 'The Arts'


    Time magazine asked Pulitzer Prize winning historian David McCullough why he started writing a biography of Pablo Picasso but never finished it. McCullough said it was because the famous artist turned out to be boring.

    Sure; he attracted a steady flow of new lovers, and made hundreds of paintings, but he didn't actually live an interesting life, said McCullough.

    Boring? There are many of his jilted 'muses' who might go even further,
  • nicolo picasso biography
  • Niko Pirosmani

    Georgian painter

    Nikoláy Aslánovich Pirosmanashvíli (Georgian: ნიკოლოზ ფიროსმანაშვილი) or Niko Pirosmani (Georgian: ნიკო ფიროსმანი),[1]simply referred to as Nikala (ნიკალა Nik’ala; –), was a Georgian painter who posthumously rose to prominence. Relatively poor for most of his life, he worked a variety of ordinary jobs. His rustic, everyday scenes are celebrated today for their depiction of the Georgia of Pirosmani's lifetime, and he has become one of the country's most beloved artistic figures.

    Niko Pirosmani is alleged to be the inspiration for the male protagonist portrayed in the Russian song Million Roses.[2][3]

    Biography

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    Pirosmani was born in the Georgian village of Mirzaani to a peasant family in modern-day Kakheti province. His parents, Aslan Pirosmanashvili and Tekle Toklikishvili, were farmers, who owned a small vineyard, with a few cows and oxen. He was later orphaned and left in the care of his t