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Picasso's Genius Revealed: He Used Common House Paint
livescience ^ | 08 February 2013 Time: 10:43 AM ET | Clara Moskowitz

Posted on 02/09/2013 9:26:41 AM PST by BenLurkin

Art scholars had long suspected Picasso was one of the first master artists to employ house paint, rather than traditional artists' paint, to achieve a glossy style that hid brush marks. There was no absolute confirmation of this, however, until now.

Physicists at Argonne National Laboratory in Lemont, Ill., trained their hard X-ray nanoprobe at Picasso's painting "The Red Armchair," completed in 1931, which they borrowed from the Art Institute of Chicago. The nanoprobe instrument can "see" details down to the level of individual pigment particles, revealing the arrangement of particular chemical elements

(Excerpt) Read more at livescience.com ...


TOPICS: Arts/Photography
KEYWORDS: picasso
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To: ottbmare

if someone has to tell you its art, then its not art,


21 posted on 02/09/2013 12:39:29 PM PST by captmar-vell
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To: BenLurkin
http://www.pablopicasso.org/guernica.jsp  photo guernica.jpg This was meant to represent the 1937 bombing, by the Germans, of the Basque "capitol" during the Spanish Civil War.
22 posted on 02/09/2013 12:46:29 PM PST by gorush (History repeats itself because human nature is static)
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To: ottbmare
The only bigger fraud was Jackson Pollock. Both are overrated beyond belief.

Give me a majestic Albert Bierstadt work for pure talent and beauty.

23 posted on 02/09/2013 12:59:42 PM PST by catfish1957 (My dream for hope and change is to see the punk POTUS in prison for treason)
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To: catfish1957
The only bigger fraud was Jackson Pollock. Both are overrated beyond belief.

Thank you! The only thing that makes these paintings valuable is speculation. No one holding these paintings can afford to tell the truth.

But one day people will realize that the emperor has no clothes. When that day comes, you don't want to be the last one holding the bag.

I hope I live to see it.

24 posted on 02/09/2013 1:03:12 PM PST by St_Thomas_Aquinas
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To: tallyhoe
I don’t like his paintings!!!

Me either, except for this one:


25 posted on 02/09/2013 1:05:40 PM PST by Gil4 (Progressives - Trying to repeal the Law of Supply and Demand since 1848)
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To: BenLurkin

I prefer van Gogh. His work is gorgeous.


26 posted on 02/09/2013 1:06:57 PM PST by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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To: notted
I'm familiar with Picasso's very early work. There is no question that he had talent. Perhaps his abandonment of difficult representational styles of art in favor of fashion and money is what made him speak with such bitterness of his own work and of the vulgarians who feted him, worshipped him, and paid him.

The cult of Picasso, like most twentieth-century art, is a massive fraud. In my fairly well-informed opinion, Tom Wolfe was correct when he wrote in The Painted Word,

...a few fashionable people discovered their own uses of [Modern Art]. It was after the First World War the modern and modernistic came into the language as exciting adjectives...By 1920, in le monde*, to be fashionable was to be modern, and Modern Art the new spirit of the avant-garde were perfectly suited for that vogue.

Picasso was a case in point. Picasso did not begin to become Picasso, in the art world or in the press, until he was pushing forty and painted the scenery for Diaghilev's Russian ballet in London in 1918. Diaghilev & Co. were a tremendous succès de scandale in fashionable London. The wild dervishing of Nijinsky, the lurid costumes - it was all too deliciously modern for words. The Modernistic settings by Picasso, André Derain, and (later on) Matisse, were all part of the excitement, and le monde loved it. "Art," in Osbert Lancaster's phrase, "came once more to roost among the duchesses."

Picasso, who had once lived in the legendary unlit attic and painted at night with a brush in one hand and a candlestick in the other - Picasso now stayed at the Savoy, had lots of clothes made on Bond Street nearby, went to all the best parties (and parties were never better), was set up with highly publicized shows of his paintings, and became a social lion...

Picasso was a magnificent businessman and promoter. He was an actor. He led a gigantic farce. But the fundamental premise--the idea that what is original is good despite its evident ugliness--is a corrupting, decadent idea. There is a reason that the Left embraces such garbage and assails traditional concepts of beauty and goodness. Surely, as a conservative, you recognize how Orwellian and destructive to society it is to call this dung good, as the Left does.

27 posted on 02/09/2013 1:16:30 PM PST by ottbmare (The OTTB Mare)
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To: BenLurkin

28 posted on 02/09/2013 1:17:40 PM PST by Kenton
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To: tallyhoe
I don’t like his paintings!!!

Art died with Monet

29 posted on 02/09/2013 1:23:34 PM PST by FatherofFive (Islam is evil and must be eradicated)
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To: BenLurkin

"Hitler - there was a painter! He could paint an entire apartment in one afternoon! Two coats!"

30 posted on 02/09/2013 1:26:46 PM PST by andy58-in-nh (Cogito, ergo armatum sum.)
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To: andy58-in-nh

The best version of “The Producers.”


31 posted on 02/09/2013 1:27:34 PM PST by dfwgator
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To: FatherofFive
I do love the French impressionists and post-impressionists (Monet, Degas, Manet, Seurat, Renoir). But I also became a big fan of the American Realist school, including the work of Edward Hopper and Winslow Homer.

Abstract expressionism never did anything for me. Picasso's earlier work was informed by post-Impressionism and still bore some resemblance to life. He remained enormously creative and sensitive to life experience, even as his craft devolved into Cubist boxes and tortured human forms.

Jackson Pollack, on the other hand, always struck me as a gigantic fraud whose work was routinely equaled at any 1960s Boardwalk "spin-your-own-abstract-painting" booth for five bucks.

32 posted on 02/09/2013 1:39:59 PM PST by andy58-in-nh (Cogito, ergo armatum sum.)
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To: dfwgator

Think about the talent in that frame: Zero Mostel, Ken Mars and Gene Wilder. I would have loved to watch them improvise on the set, as they actually did for many takes.


33 posted on 02/09/2013 1:44:16 PM PST by andy58-in-nh (Cogito, ergo armatum sum.)
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To: buffaloguy
Now this is a real artist!


34 posted on 02/09/2013 1:57:36 PM PST by newfreep (Breitbart sent me...)
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To: FatherofFive

Art died after the Renaissance ...


35 posted on 02/09/2013 1:59:27 PM PST by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now it is your turn ...)
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To: BenLurkin; a fool in paradise; Slings and Arrows

36 posted on 02/09/2013 2:01:17 PM PST by Revolting cat! (Bad things are wrong! Ice cream is delicious!)
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To: BenLurkin; a fool in paradise

Oh, man what a couple o days. First, claims that some longhair named Eddie Van Hellem is the greatest guitarist of all time, then a list of 50 greatest jazz vocals filled with pop songs, now a “I don’t like Picasso” thread. We’ve been holding our collective bad breaths waiting for your opinion of Picasso.


37 posted on 02/09/2013 2:07:09 PM PST by Revolting cat! (Bad things are wrong! Ice cream is delicious!)
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To: BenLurkin
Well some people try to pick up girls
And get called assholes
This never happened to Pablo Picasso
He could walk down your street
And girls could not resist his stare and 
So Pablo Picasso was never called an asshole

(Jonathan Richman)


38 posted on 02/09/2013 2:13:17 PM PST by Revolting cat! (Bad things are wrong! Ice cream is delicious!)
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To: BenLurkin; Revolting cat!; a fool in paradise

Not bad, but he’s no Bob Ross.


39 posted on 02/09/2013 3:35:52 PM PST by Slings and Arrows (You can't have IngSoc without an Emmanuel Goldstein.)
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To: andy58-in-nh
Abstract expressionism never did anything for me.

And the same thing for classical music. Nothing good has been written for at least 100 years. Everything is about pitch and tone. None of the brilliance of a Beetoven or Mozart, or Vivaldi.

40 posted on 02/09/2013 5:42:46 PM PST by FatherofFive (Islam is evil and must be eradicated)
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