To say that Pablo Picasso dominated Western art in the 20th
century is, by now, the merest commonplace. Before his 50th
birthday, the little Spaniard from Malaga had become the very
prototype of the modern artist as public figure. No painter
before him had had a mass audience in his own lifetime. The
total public for Titian in the 16th century or Velazquez in the
17th was probably no more than a few thousand people--though
that included most of the crowned heads, nobility and
intelligentsia of Europe. Picasso's audience--meaning people who
had heard of him and seen his work, at least in
reproduction--was in the tens, possibly hundreds, of millions.
He and his work were the subjects of unending analysis, gossip,
dislike, adoration and rumor.
He was a superstitious, sarcastic man, sometimes rotten to his
children, often beastly to his women. He had contempt for women
artists. His famous remark about women being "goddesses or
doormats" has rendered him odious to feminists, but women tended
to walk into both roles open-eyed and eagerly, for his charm was
legendary. Whole cultural industries derived from his much
mythologized virility. He was the Minotaur in a canvas-and-paper
labyrinth of his own construction.
He was also politically lucky. Though to Nazis his work was the
epitome of "degenerate art," his fame protected him during the
German occupation of Paris, where he lived; and after the war,
when artists and writers were thought disgraced by the slightest
affiliation with Nazism or fascism, Picasso gave enthusiastic
endorsement to Joseph Stalin, a mass murderer on a scale far
beyond Hitler's, and scarcely received a word of criticism for
it, even in cold war America.
No painter or sculptor, not even Michelangelo, had been as
famous as this in his own lifetime. And it is quite possible
that none ever will be again, now that the mandate to set forth
social meaning, to articulate myth and generate widely memorable
images has been so largely transferred from painting and
sculpture to other media: photography, movies, television.
Though Marcel Duchamp, that cunning old fox of conceptual irony,
has certainly had more influence on nominally vanguard art over
the past 30 years than Picasso, the Spaniard was the last great
beneficiary of the belief that the language of painting and
sculpture really mattered to people other than their devotees.
And he was the first artist to enjoy the obsessive attention of
mass media. He stood at the intersection of these two worlds. If
that had not been so, his restless changes of style, his
constant pushing of the envelope, would not have created such
controversy--and thus such celebrity.
In today's art world, a place without living culture heroes, you
can't even imagine such a protean monster arising. His output
was vast. This is not a virtue in itself--only a few paintings
by Vermeer survive, and fewer still by the brothers Van Eyck,
but they are as firmly lodged in history as Picasso ever was or
will be. Still, Picasso's oeuvre filled the world, and he left
permanent marks on every discipline he entered. His work
expanded fractally, one image breeding new clusters of others,
right up to his death.
Moreover, he was the artist with whom virtually every other
artist had to reckon, and there was scarcely a 20th century
movement that he didn't inspire, contribute to or--in the case
of Cubism, which, in one of art history's great collaborations,
he co-invented with Georges Braque--beget. The exception, since
Picasso never painted an abstract picture in his life, was
abstract art; but even there his handprints lay everywhere--one
obvious example being his effect on the early work of American
Abstract Expressionist painters, Arshile Gorky, Jackson Pollock
and Willem de Kooning, among others.
Much of the story of modern sculpture is bound up with welding
and assembling images from sheet metal, rather than modeling in
clay, casting in bronze or carving in wood; and this tradition
of the open constructed form rather than solid mass arose from
one small guitar that Picasso snipped and joined out of tin in
1912. If collage--the gluing of previously unrelated things and
images on a flat surface--became a basic mode of modern art,
that too was due to Picasso's Cubist collaboration with Braque.
He was never a member of the Surrealist group, but in the 1920s
and '30s he produced some of the scariest distortions of the
human body and the most violently irrational, erotic images of
Eros and Thanatos ever committed to canvas. He was not a realist
painter/reporter, still less anyone's official muralist, and yet
Guernica remains the most powerful political image in modern
art, rivaled only by some of the Mexican work of Diego Rivera.
Picasso was regarded as a boy genius, but if he had died before
1906, his 25th year, his mark on 20th century art would have
been slight. The so-called Blue and Rose periods, with their
wistful etiolated figures of beggars and circus folk, are not,
despite their great popularity, much more than pendants to late
19th century Symbolism. It was the experience of modernity that
created his modernism, and that happened in Paris. There, mass
production and reproduction had come to the forefront of
ordinary life: newspapers, printed labels, the overlay of
posters on walls--the dizzily intense public life of signs,
simultaneous, high-speed and layered. This was the cityscape of
Cubism.
Picasso was not a philosopher or a mathematician (there is no
"geometry" in Cubism), but the work he and Braque did between
1911 and 1918 was intuitively bound to the perceptions of
thinkers like Einstein and Alfred North Whitehead: that reality
is not figure and void, it is all relationships, a twinkling
field of interdependent events. Long before any Pop artists were
born, Picasso latched on to the magnetism of mass culture and
how high art could refresh itself through common vernaculars.
Cubism was hard to read, willfully ambiguous, and yet demotic
too. It remains the most influential art dialect of the early
20th century. As if to distance himself from his imitators,
Picasso then went to the opposite extreme of embracing the
classical past, with his paintings of huge dropsical women
dreaming Mediterranean dreams in homage to Corot and Ingres.
His "classical" mode, which he would revert to for decades to
come, can also be seen as a gesture of independence. After his
collaboration with Braque ended with his comment that "Braque is
my wife"--words that were as disparaging to women as to
Braque--Picasso remained a loner for the rest of his career. But
a loner with a court and maitresses en titre. He didn't even
form a friendship with Henri Matisse until both artists were
old. His close relationships tended to be with poets and
writers.
Though the public saw him as the archetypal modernist, he was
disconnected from much modern art. Some of the greatest modern
painters--Kandinsky, for instance, or Mondrian--saw their work
as an instrument of evolution and human development. But Picasso
had no more of a Utopian streak than did his Spanish idol, Goya.
The idea that art evolved, or had any kind of historical
mission, struck him as ridiculous. "All I have ever made," he
once said, "was made for the present and in the hope that it
will always remain in the present. When I have found something
to express, I have done it without thinking of the past or the
future." Interestingly, he also stood against the Expressionist
belief that the work of art gains value by disclosing the truth,
the inner being, of its author. "How can anyone enter into my
dreams, my instincts, my desires, my thoughts ... and above all
grasp from them what I have been about--perhaps against my own
will?" he exclaimed.
To make art was to achieve a tyrannous freedom from
self-explanation. The artist's work was mediumistic ("Painting
is stronger than me, it makes me do what it wants"), solipsistic
even. To Picasso, the idea that painting did itself through him
meant that it wasn't subject to cultural etiquette. None of the
other fathers of Modernism felt it so strongly--not Matisse, not
Mondrian, certainly not Braque.
In his work, everything is staked on sensation and desire. His
aim was not to argue coherence but to go for the strongest level
of feeling. He conveyed it with tremendous plastic force, making
you feel the weight of forms and the tension of their
relationships mainly by drawing and tonal structure. He was
never a great colorist, like Matisse or Pierre Bonnard. But
through metaphor, he crammed layers of meaning together to
produce flashes of revelation. In the process, he reversed one
of the currents of modern art. Modernism had rejected
storytelling: what mattered was formal relationships. But
Picasso brought it back in a disguised form, as a psychic
narrative, told through metaphors, puns and equivalences.
The most powerful element in the story--at least after
Cubism--was sex. The female nude was his obsessive subject.
Everything in his pictorial universe, especially after 1920,
seemed related to the naked bodies of women. Picasso imposed on
them a load of feeling, ranging from dreamy eroticism (as in
some of his paintings of his mistress Marie-Therese Walter in
the '30s) to a sardonic but frenzied hostility, that no Western
artist had made them carry before. He did this through
metamorphosis, recomposing the body as the shape of his
fantasies of possession and of his sexual terrors. Now the
hidden and comparatively decorous puns of Cubism (the sound
holes of a mandolin, for instance, becoming the mask of Pierrot)
came out of their closet. "To displace," as Picasso described
the process, "to put eyes between the legs, or sex organs on the
face. To contradict. Nature does many things the way I do, but
she hides them! My painting is a series of cock-and-bull
stories."
There seems little doubt that the greatest of Picasso's work
came in the 30 years between Les Demoiselles d'Avignon (1907)
and Guernica (1937). But of course he didn't decline into
triviality. Consistently through the war years and the '50s, and
even now and then in the '60s and '70s, he would produce
paintings and prints of considerable power. Sometimes they would
be folded into series of variations on the old masters and 19th
century painters he needed to measure himself against, such as
Velazquez and Goya, or Poussin, Delacroix, Manet and Courbet. In
his last years particularly, his production took on a manic and
obsessive quality, as though the creative act (however
repetitious) could forestall death. Which it could not. His
death left the public with a nostalgia for genius that no talent
today, in the field of painting, can satisfy.
TIME art critic Robert Hughes is the author of The Fatal Shore
and American Visions Article from the TIME 100 - The Most
Important People of the 20th Century
From
Time Magazine Online