Spain, France kick off anniversary celebration of Picasso

Against the backdrop of Picasso´s iconic anti-war painting, "Guernica," the culture ministers of France and Spain gathered on Sept. 12 in Madrid's Reina Sofia Museum to kick off a year of commemorative acts to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the death of the Spanish artist who revolutionized the world of art.
In "Picasso Celebration," France and Spain will be organizing more than 40 exhibitions conferences and other events in museums in Madrid, Paris, Barcelona, Malaga and other cities in Europe and North America over the next 12 months.
Picasso was born October 25, 1881, in Malaga and died in Mougins, France, on April 8, 1973.
"Our aim is to revindicate the artistic legacy of Picasso and the relevance of his work," said Spanish Culture Minister Miquel Iceta.
"If there is one artist that defines the 20th century, who presents it in all its cruelty, violence, passion, excesses and contradictions, that artist is Pablo Picasso."
Although born in Spain. Picasso spent most of his adult life in France.
In a career spanning nearly eight decades. he is said to have created tens of thousands of paintings, drawings, sculptures and ceramics covering an incredible range of styles and movements that made him possibly the most influential and celebrated artist of the past 150 years.
Together with artist Georges Braque, he started the avant-garde Cubist movement that radically changed European painting and sculpture.
"The abundant, inventive and often radical work of Picasso continues to exert a genuine fascination throughout the world," said French Culture Minister Rima Abdul Malak.
Picasso's reputation for having mistreated many of the women in his life is not being ignored during the anniversary and will be the...
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