Pablo Picasso's Impact On The World

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Pablo Picasso is considered by many as one of the most important figures of the 20th century. Not only is he an artist and an innovator, but is considered responsible for co-founding the entire Cubist movement alongside Georges Braque. This Spanish born painter took modern art by a storm because of his distinct style and eye for artistic creation. No other artist prior to Picasso, had such an impact on the art world, or had the number of fans and critics as he did. Picasso was born in Malaga, Spain on October 25, 1881. His father, Don Jose Ruiz, like his son was a painter and professor of art. Don Jose was impressed by his son’s drawings at an early age, and his mother one time mentioned that Picasso’s first word was pencil. In 1895, Picasso …show more content…

Picasso makes viewers look at this painting uneasy, and more like he’s saying that women are not the gentle and passive human beings that men would like them to be (Stokstad). Instead, in my opinion, he is making it look like all females are like prostitutes. In a criticism by Anna C. Chave, I must agree on her when she says that, every female whether they are prostitutes or not are “prey to that pervasive suspicion that a trace of a whore lurks in every woman—just as an “honest” woman supposedly lurks in every whore” (Chave). In a way, he puts the prostitutes in a bad, position, as if they enjoy what they do, but the masks that they are wearing, and their stares display a different story (Chave). I get the sense that the masks cover their true identities- their real dreams, and the men that go out seeking sexual favor do not get to see what really lies behind the mask. More like the women are alienated, and participating in the man’s desires, but the cost is giving up their own (Chave). Picasso is giving the message that these women had the desire to become prostitutes but for some that is not the

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