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Pablo Picasso Paintings
ARTifacts - Fun facts about Pablo Picasso
Picasso’s Later Period
From the 1940s until the time of death in 1973, Picasso’s work was hard to classify thematically or under a particular genre, style or even medium. After the rather neatly defined periods from earlier in his career, the artist had loosened somewhat following the development of Synthetic Cubism between 1912 and 1919, and there was a large degree of overlap between his Classical and Surrealist periods. That occurred in the 1920s and 1930s and by the time of the 1940s he was moving between mediums, working alternately with canvas painting, sculpture, printmaking, drawing and ceramics, all on varying degrees of scale.
Picasso’s Surrealist Period
Unlike some of the other phases in the career of Spanish artist Pablo Picasso, his Surrealist Period was not delineated by clear watersheds but had considerable overlap with the previous Classical Period that had followed the end of the First World War. The Classical Period may often be defined as having occurred between 1917 and 1924, but the reality is that Three Musicians, a highpoint in the Synthetic Cubism movement, was only produced in 1921, and that he continued to produce works that had the same Return To Order traditional style well after 1924. By the mid-1920s the Surrealist movement was growing in strength and popularity among and even a visionary like Picasso couldn’t help but be influenced by this group of Parisian artists. Indeed, there was something of a symbiosis between them as the early Surrealist often regarded Picasso as being their artistic ‘step-father’.


































