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Picasso Rules
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At some
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point during John Richardson's superb biography of Picasso you begin to feel
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grateful to Art, not for the pleasure it affords the consumer, but for the
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outlet it offers the psychopath. Picasso once explained that "in art one must
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kill one's father," and his life as told by Richardson plays out as a series of
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these little metaphorical murders. Artists whose work Picasso is unable to
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dismiss (not many: he once described the Sistine ceiling as "a vast sketch by
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Daumier") he cannibalizes. He sketches one of Gauguin's Tahitian women and
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signs the portrait "Paul Picasso." He copies the signatures of Steinlen and
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Forain over and again like some angry shaman. A friend describing Picasso
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racing back and forth between the Greek and Roman rooms in the Louvre says he
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"paces around and around like a hound in search of game."
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In the
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current exhibit of Picasso's early work on display in the National Gallery in
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Washington (which is pegged to Richardson's first volume), the walls wreak
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havoc with art history: Picasso consuming Symbolism; Picasso eating
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Impressionism; Picasso devouring Fauvism. One of the myths of the modern artist
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is that he could never have been anything other than what he was. But if you
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take Picasso's character and transport it to late 20 th century
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America, it is easier to imagine it doing almost anything except painting
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pictures. People with the predatory instincts that led Picasso to become an
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artist in late 19 th century Spain become takeover specialists or
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basketball players or filmmakers in our culture.
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The life and the work are bound together by this single
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character trait: not so much the instinct to create as the compulsion to erase.
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Richardson's Picasso is unable to abide even his own tradition. As soon as he
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settles into a new style of painting (or a new home, or a new mistress), he is
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contriving to destroy it (or her). Richardson's account does not so much excuse
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the bad behavior of the artist as use it to explain the career: The art was
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great at least in part because the artist was flawed.
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This makes
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all the more puzzling a strain in the critical response not only to Richardson
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but also to Picasso: a tendency to dismiss his art because of his life. So far
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as I can tell, the trend was set in motion a decade or so ago when Arianna
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Stassinopoulos Huffington published her sexual history of Picasso. You can see
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it gathering steam in Surviving Picasso , the 1996 Merchant-Ivory film
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that views Picasso pathetically, through the unsympathetic eyes of his lover
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Françoise Gilot. But it reached a new level of respectability last December,
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when The New Yorker 's art critic, Adam Gopnik, reviewed the second
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volume of Richardson's life of Picasso.
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Gopnik turns Richardson on his head: If Picasso's art is
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bad, he argues, it is so at least in part because Picasso was a bad man. This
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is not exactly a new line of art criticism, but it's rare to find it taking
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root at such altitudes. (The piece recently won a National Magazine Award.)
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And, given the violently mixed reaction to the National Gallery exhibition
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(Michael Kimmelman writing in the New York Times , "I think, from the
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show, that if he had died in 1906, before Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, he would
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be remembered as a second tier Symbolist."), you can't help but wonder if
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Gopnik has finally figured out the way to dull the enthusiasm Americans feel
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for Picasso--by playing to their self-righteousness. After a long passage
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detailing the artist's crimes against women, Gopnik rolls up his sleeves:
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So Picasso was a creep
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with women, and Richardson gives him, out of a rather touching and, in this
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day, uncommon biographer's loyalty, too large a benefit of the doubt on the
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question. ... Who cares? Does it affect Picasso's art, or the way we see it?
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Here the reviewer needs to drop all pretense of magisterial loft, jump down
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from the bench, and start testifying. Last spring I went for a walk in William
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Rubin's vast show, at the Museum of Modern Art, devoted to Picasso's
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portraits.
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A single
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visit to an exhibition! All becomes suddenly clear! "Picasso's misogyny was in
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evidence on every wall," Gopnik writes. "And, along with misogyny, there was
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its Siamese twin, an oversweetened vision of family life in which the
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children's implied vacancy is really Dad's."
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It was only a matter of time before family values entered
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art criticism. But who would have thought it would be imported by The New
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Yorker ? It's hard to think of a clearer sign that old-fashioned Comstockian
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attitudes are once again in vogue, this time with a new twist. The modern
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moralist lacks the courage of his convictions. He is reluctant to attack the
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artist's morality directly. Instead, he attacks his morality in the guise of
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attacking his art. The critic is using the life as a weapon against the
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work.
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One sign
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of what Gopnik is up to is his tendency, when he is on the subject of Picasso's
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character, to err on the side of the prosecution. In making the case against
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Picasso you might think there would be no need to exaggerate the artist's
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crimes against his fellow man. But Gopnik does, describing Picasso as "a
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coward, who sat out two world wars while his friends were suffering and dying,"
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adding that "he may have been right to do this in the First War, but he did it
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again, in the same way, in the second." ("Picasso was born in 1881," notes
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James Fenton in the New York Review of Books . "To accuse a man of
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cowardice for not having joined up in 1939 when he was in his late fifties
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strikes me as a complete novelty, and it would have been a novelty to those
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Allied soldiers who, on the liberation of Paris, flocked to Picasso's studio as
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a place of pilgrimage.")
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Gopnik's bad faith extends to Richardson's
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biography, which he faults (unbelievably) for treating Picasso too kindly.
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Early in his article--which he has called "Escaping Picasso: The Great Master
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That Never Was"--the author reminds us that there was a time when he devoted
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himself to Picasso studies, how the most trivial academic revelation once
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caused him to run off "to a nearby bar to drink my very first vodka on the
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rocks. ... I passed out and had to be carried home." But he is older now. He
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has put his academic past behind him. He is able to see the world as it is. He
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is able to see that scholars have been covering up the crimes of the artist to
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protect him from justice. "Richardson's need to make Picasso into a serious
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artist and an honorable man (instead of the inspired poetic rascal he actually
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was) deforms, above all, his account of Picasso's relations with women," he
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writes.
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What is peculiar about this
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is that much of what Gopnik knows about Picasso he knows from Richardson. It
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would be more true to say that Gopnik's need to see Picasso as a rascal deforms
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his view of Picasso's art. Both men are working with the same set of facts and
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accusations. The difference is that Richardson pleads for understanding while
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Gopnik brays for outrage.
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Gopnik dismisses the cult of
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Picasso as "just another kind of celebrity worship." His piece proves this
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point nicely. His is exactly the approach of every celebrity journalist to his
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subject. Why bother with the art on its terms when you can have it on your
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own?
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