It's one of the few books truly indispensable to understanding Picasso's artistic and spiritual growth. Crammed with new insights, this synthesis weds an irresistible narrative to hundreds of wonderfully apposite photographs and art reproductions. As we watch the maternally overprotected prodigy transform himself into the daring, confident bohemian who took Paris by storm, Richardson ably untangles the skeinok of friendships and love affairs that Picasso transmuted into the personal mythology overflowing his canvases. Like his much-maligned father, Jose Ruiz Blasco, an easy-going art teacher, Pablo, in Barcelona and Montmarte, was the star of a tertulia, a circle of cronies, who met regularly at a cafe to gossip and exchange views. Richardson, a native Londoner who now lives in New York City, lived in the south of France for more than a decade and came to know Picasso as a neighbor in Provence. Richardson, who was the artist's close friend in France for a decade, attributes to Picasso's ``demonic Andalusian birthright'' his jolting oscillations between tenderness and cruelty, his self-dramatization, his harnessing of sexuality to his art. Remarkably intimate yet epic in sweep, this astonishing, continually engaging biography (first installment of a four-volume opus) neither glorifies Picasso nor paints him as an ogre. Sir John Patrick Richardson, KBE, FBA (6 February 1924 12 March 2019) was a British art historian and biographer of Pablo Picasso.
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