Picasso’s Guernica: Great Art Explained

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in 1937 Picasso was the most famous artist in  the world. A prolific innovator of art forms, he   had already pioneered cubism, invented collage,  and made major contributions to symbolism   and surrealism. And he was just about to create  the most powerful anti-war painting in history. Monday April the 26th 1937 - German warplanes  began appearing in the sky above the small   Basque village of Guernica. It was 4:30 p.m.  and the planes were here on behalf of general   Franco's fascist regime. and as a macabre rehearsal for the blitzkrieg tactics of World War II.    The attack was timed to maximise civilian casualties. For over three hours 25 bombers dropped 100,000   pounds of explosive and incendiary bombs on the  village, reducing it to rubble and killing 1/3 of   the population. This brutal and unprovoked attack  shocked the world, it also inspired Picasso to produce   a political painting, which is as relevant today  as it was when he produced it over 80 years ago. in 1936 a group of right-wing generals launched  a military coup on the legally elected Spanish   Republic and started the Spanish Civil War.  The war had been going on for six months   when Picasso was given a commission to produce  a large-scale mural for the Spanish Republic's   Pavilion at the 1937 World's Fair in Paris - where  Picasso was living. Picasso was famously apolitical   and told the Republicans "I don't do politics", but  after months of staring as a blank canvas he was   still struggling to come up with ideas. History  intervened and Picasso found his subject. Like the rest of the world, he opened his newspaper  on April the 27th to find devastating images   of the bombing of Guernica. Picasso was horrified  and frantically started work on new sketches for   the Commission. He would complete the enormous  painting in only three weeks. Perhaps Picasso's   greatest skill was reinvention? In the Demoiselles  d'Avignon he played with idealized female beauty.   and in Guernica, he would reinvigorate the genre of  historical painting. The first thing you notice   is the gigantic size. It is four meters by eight  meters or 11 feet by 26 feet, and is one piece   of material rather than several canvases sewn  together. After Paris it was to be sent around   the world to raise money for Spain. Because of the  size, each time it travelled the canvas had to be   removed from the stretcher, rolled up, packed,  and shipped again and again. In that sense we   can compare Guernica to portable tapestries known  in Spain as "Sagas". They were used in Spain and   other countries, from the fifteenth century - as  temporary curtains banners and wall hangings.   during Lent like Guernica, it was propaganda - but of  a religious kind. He primed the canvas with several   layers of reflective lead-white, an antiquated  paint base used by Leonardo da Vinci.    Picasso wanted a reflective surface to paint on. The ground  layer was important, as it was to form part of the   composition. He used normal household paint with  a minimum amount of gloss, so the white parts of   the painting are luminous, whereas the blacks are  matt black. The speed at which he paints, leave   splashes such as here and mistakes - adding to the  urgency of the painting. The other thing you notice   straight away is the absence of colour, but in 1937  people only experience current events in black and white,  and Guernica was as current as you could  get. Picasso himself saw the Spanish Civil War   play out in black and white in newspapers, and he even gives us a suggestion of torn newsprint in the horse's chainmail. Picasso was the magpie of the art world, with an encyclopaedic knowledge of  art history. With Guernica, it is these visual  references that anchor the work. Peter Paul Rubens, was an artist Picasso loved, and Rubens  painting "An Allegory Showing the Effects of War"   from 1638, is the work the most inspired Picasso's Guernica. If we flip Rubens painting, we can see the similarities in composition. From left to right we get a weeping woman with a child in her arms.   A flying fury of war. holding out a torch, and a woman facing the heavens with outstretched arms. We can also compare the weeping woman to Michelangelo's "La Pieta" and the flying fury to Prud'hons "Allegory of Justice" Goya, an artist Picasso admired is  another inspiration. 3rd of May 1808 also depicts   a nighttime massacre. The central figures pose is  reminiscent of the screaming woman and inevitably   both figures can be compared to a crucifixion, and  in both paintings we find the sign of the stigmata. There are also comparisons to be made with his own earlier work. But there is more than just iconographic inspiration here. Surprisingly - Picasso's Guernica has no specific references  to the actual bombing of the Basque village. He has created a fictitious scene whose intensity evokes the suffering of all wars. Guernica is an allegorical painting in the same way Rubens  work is an allegorical response to the 30 Years War. The scene is intentionally chaotic to evoke the horror and confusion of war. We are thrown into apocalyptic action where characters overlap and intersect. Destruction, violent death and  mutilation are everywhere. Despite Picasso's avant-garde qualities. he trained as a classical  artist and Guernica uses classical language.   Despite the chaos, there is in fact a clear  visual order. Picasso balances the composition   by organizing the figures into three vertical  groupings, moving left to right, while the central   figures are stabilized within a large triangle of  light. To the far left we see a wide-eyed bull with   a dark body and white head. The horse and bull are  images Picasso used his entire career. Part of the   life and death ritual of Spanish bullfights.  The bull is the only figure that is looking   at us, the viewer. Picasso himself thought of  the bull as representing brutality and darkness.   Its gaze is cold and detached. It has come to be  seen as representing Fascism or Franco himself.   Its tail smoulders like the smoking remains of  Guernica. Underneath the bull, a woman is holding   a dead child, screaming towards the heavens, her  bare breasts that once fed her child are exposed,   and her eyes are in the shape of tears. She is a  secular virgin and child tainted by war.  Further down lies a dead soldier representing both  futility and hope. His disjointed parts are   strewn about the floor. One severed arm carries a  Broken Sword of failure from which grows a white   poppy - the symbol of remembrance and hope. In his  other hand the signs of the stigmata, represent   the ultimate sacrifice. Between the bull and the  horse we can just about see a dove, normally a   representation of peace the Picasso version, with  his pained expression and broken body suggests   that peace is all but destroyed. The light bulb  is the single image of 20th century technology   and has multiple meanings. Perhaps it is the eye  of God overlooking the madness of war? The more   accepted interpretation is that it represents the  technology that destroyed Guernica. In Spanish the   word for lights bulb is "bombilla", which brings  to mind the word "bomb". The screaming horse at   the center is collapsing from his gaping wound  but its head remains upward as it struggles to live. You can almost hear those ear piercing  screams. Picasso himself saw the terrorised   horse as the people of Guernica. The burning  woman is perhaps the strongest representation   of the paintings anti-war feeling. A woman is  trapped in a burning building, pleading at the   sky, perhaps to God? Perhaps to the German planes to  stop the destruction? As she does so, the building   continues to burn and crumble around her. Death is  inevitable. Another terrified woman with an injured   leg bleeding from the knee and trying to stop  the blood with her hand. She is looking longingly   towards the oil lamp. It is actually the oil lamp  that is the source of light in the scene and NOT   the electric light bulb. The tiny flame is hope.  And it is strong enough to shed light upon the   entire scene. It is the only sliver of Hope in the  painting and is thought to represent the spirit   of the Spanish Republic. Guernica is not supposed  to have a singular interpretation. As Picasso said: "We all know that art is not truth. Art is a lie that makes us realise truth" Guernica's ambiguity  and lack of specific historical detail make the painting timeless. Picasso worked on the painting for 35 days and finished it on the 4th of June 1937. When it was unveiled at the Paris Expo, the public reaction was mixed. It was too avant-garde  for the Spanish officials, who preferred another more traditional painting that they'd also commissioned. By Horacio Ferrer. However - after Paris, Guernica's reputation started to grow grow steadily, as it travelled the world to raise money for the Republican cause. The start of the Second World War made its imagery more  recognisable - and painfully familiar. News announcer: "A most eventful year - Spain's three-year-old civil war  ends, and Generalissimo Franco enters Barcelona"    Picasso refused to allow the painting to be seen in Spain while Franco ruled. And Guernica was sent  on another tour. This time to the United States, to raise money for Spanish refugees fleeing Fascism.   By 1940, it was at the Museum of Modern Art in New  York, where it stayed on semi-permanent display...   For the next forty years. Picasso continued living in Nazi occupied Paris. It is said that when a  German officer visited him, he saw a photograph of Guernica on Picasso's wall. He asked Picasso: "Did you do that?" Picasso replied: "No YOU did" In New York, Guernica's fame grew, and during the Vietnam War it became a powerful anti-war symbol. In 1974 a protester defaced the painting, with the words "KILL LIES ALL". It created international headlines. Guernica was covered in heavy varnish and the graffiti did no real damage at all. The fact that Guernica inspired such passions was a testament to its enduring power Picasso died in 1973 at the age of 91. He had produced 50,000 works of art,   including 1,885 paintings. While numerous works  by Picasso are masterpieces Guernica stands alone.   Franco died in 1975, and with democracy restored,  the paintings long exile was over.   Even in the 21st century, Guernica was causing  controversy. A tapestry of Guernica was put   on display at the United Nations. In 2003 the, then  Secretary of State Colin Powell. delivered a   televised speech at the UN - arguing for war on  Iraq. In a form of blatant censorship the Bush   administration, requested that the tapestry  was covered up. It is extraordinary that over   60 years AFTER its completion Guernica's message  worried even the most powerful nation on earth. No work of art in the 20th century has left  its mark, in quite the way Guernica has.    It has become the universal symbol of indiscriminate  slaughter, and it has helped to shape a century.   The lessons of Guernica, of universal  suffering have still not been learned. And that is why Guernica is just  as important today as it was in 1937 Guernica is not just "contemporary art", It is history.
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Channel: Great Art Explained
Views: 535,067
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Keywords: art, guernica, basque, spain, antiwar, protest, paintings, picasso, art explained, history of art, Leonardo da vinci, art history, paintings explained, painting, art techniques, arte, onlineart, creative, artnews, fine art, genius, oil painting, portrait, portrait painting, paris, science, reinasofia, madrid, Spanish civil war, great art explained, cubism, collage, symbolism, surrealism, modern art, prado, moma, protest art
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Length: 13min 41sec (821 seconds)
Published: Tue Jun 16 2020
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