Art Emanates From Pain and Sadness: Picassos Blue Period
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The Blue Period (1901-1904) has long been considered Picassos
first true evolution as an artist in creating a manner of his own.
Beginning with several paintings that memorialized the recent suicide
of his friend Casagemas, the artist's themes grew somber and dark,
and he implemented a palette consisting almost exclusively of shades
of blue. The monochromatic use of blue was fairly standard in symbolist
painting in Western Europe, often related to representations of melancholy
or hopelessness. The figures in his works were often depicted as Bohemian-type
outcasts, which happened to be the life that Picasso was leading himself,
poor and far away from his family. Some examples of his subjects included
beggars, prostitutes, the disabled, circus performers as well as some
of his penniless friends. The Blue Period dramatizes the artist as
an outcast from society and the theme of this era in Picassos
career owes much to the eighteen-nineties when the idea of the artist
as lhomme maudit, happy and dissociated from ordinary life but
superior to it, was created in Western Europe.
The nearly exclusive use of blue during this time period has never
been satisfactorily explained but there have been many assumptions:
This period was triggered by the unfortunate fate of his best friend
Casegemas who was rejected by a girl with whom he was infatuated,
attempted to kill her and ultimately took his own life. Picasso stated,
It was thinking about Casagemas that got me started painting
in blue.
It was believed that Picasso was merely inspired (or uninspired depending
on your take) by his living situation, as well as being unrecognized
and in extreme poverty. One of his closest friends Sabartés
wrote, Picasso believed Art to [be] the son of Sadness and Suffering
that
sadness lent itself to meditation and that suffering was fundamental
to life
If we demand sincerity of an artist, we must remember
that sincerity is not to be found outside the realm of grief.
The use of blue has also been attributed to the fact that Picasso
was too poor to buy any other colors as well his habit of working
at night by lamplight.
Famous Psychologist Carl Jung once regarded this as evidence of incipient
schizophrenia.
Picasso may have had some subconscious influences from Spanish religious
paintings, which often depicted agonized martyrs with their waxen
faces stained with tears and bodies streaked with blood.
Its widely believed that the origins were much more complex
and connected with Picassos artistic aims as blue was rich in
associations and a favorite among many artists of the time. Picasso
produced many famous works that are truly
indicative of his presumed meanings. Most historians and critics would
agree that the key painting of this
time was La Vie. The work contains a deep sense of melancholy and
has given rise to more mystification
than any other early work by this artist. Scholars agree that the
painting is unmistakably allegorical and
scholars feel that this particular subject matter may be referencing
the responsibilities of daily life, the incompatibility of sexual
love, and the struggles behind artistic creativity. The pessimistic
outlook is further captivated by the use of the cold, bleak, blue
tones. An interesting subtopic is the fact that this artistic masterpiece
was intended as a self-portrait. X-ray analysis reveals that the central
figure was originally Picasso, further evidenced by the preliminary
drawings created in preparation for the painting itself. The recent
advancement of x-ray analysis is crucial in uncovering hidden intentions
and original concepts of famous paintings of the past. This development
in technology is further illustrated and highlights another famous
work by Picasso during this time.
The Old Guitarist is another example of Picasso evoking portrayals
of the impoverished underclass in a predominantly blue tone. Relatively
recent advancements including x-radiographs and infrared reflectograms
have allowed researchers at the Art Institute of Chicago find clues
to both the origin and meaning of the underlying groundwork. Within
some sketches and letters that Picasso had sent to friend before the
completion of The Old Guitarist, certain hidden elements showed an
uncanny resemblance to the ideas described and sketches drawn in those
very letters. There were two main compositions that were discovered
beneath the final draft of his masterpiece.
Through analysis, the first composition appears to feature a mother
and child with the mothers right arm extended behind the child,
which matches up with one of the sketches in the letters. In addition,
there are also heads of both a calf and a cow with the cow apparently
licking the calfs head. This appears to be exactly what Picasso
was describing in his letter but nobody
knows why he abandoned the initial painting even though the idea was
worth mentioning to a friend.
In the second composition, a comparison between the hidden elements
underneath The Old Guitarist
and a sketch that Picasso had just recently done was made. This pose
of an imploring woman with outstretched arms can also be viewed from
x-ray analysis. Scholars suggest that this particular composition
was probably more closely linked to this drawing due to the obvious
intent to depict an underclass citizen with a guitar.
Works Cited
Blunt, Anthony and Phoebe Pool. Picasso: The Formative Years. New
York: New York
Graphic Society, 1962.
Richardson, John. A Life of Picasso: Volume 1 1881-1906. New York:
Random House,
1991.
Internet Sources
Mood of a Painting <http://webexhibits.org/colorart/mood.html>
Picasso: The Early Years, 1892-1906 <http://www.nga.gov/exhibitions/picbro.shtm>
Pablo Picasso (1881-1973)<http://www.artchive.com/artchive/P/picasso_blue.html>
Revealing Picasso
<http://www.artic.edu/aic/conservation/revealingpicasso/arthistory.html>