Pablo Picasso

Overview

Pablo Picasso was an influential 20th-century artist recognized as one of the inventors of cubism, which simplified figures and scenes into flattened geometric shapes and imagined arrangements. He was a prolific artist responsible for roughly 50,000 works. Throughout his life, he experimented with different tools and media, resulting in many styles and distinct phases.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • Picasso was one of the 20th century's most influential artists

    The artist is recognized as one of the inventors of cubism, which simplified figures and scenes into flattened geometric shapes and imagined arrangements. The movement spurred new styles in response and led to increasingly abstract art. Styles like futurism, dada, De Stijl, and art deco were built on the simple forms, abstract ideas, collage, and found objects of early cubism.

  • See some of Picasso's most famous works

    Picasso is one of history’s most famous painters. He redefined the standards of artistic beauty and forged a unique, revolutionary modern style. Today, he inspires artists looking to challenge the status quo. The Museu Picasso in Barcelona, the artist’s hometown, holds nearly 5,000 of Picasso’s early works, making it the perfect place to glimpse the ideas and range of his artistic practice. Below is 1917's "Fruit Bowl."

  • Picasso is the bestselling painter of all time

    Picasso’s artistic legacy remains lucrative 50 years after his death. His output was immense, and several individual works have sold at auction for over $100M. Those sales were not only jaw-dropping but also historic, leading to Picasso’s place as the top-grossing artist of all time.

  • How to paint like Picasso

    The cubist style Picasso is most known for explores interesting ideas of form and structure that break from tradition. It turns complex figures into geometric shapes, flattens images, and draws attention to the painting over the subject. Artist Selwyn Leamy breaks down the basics of the cubist technique to show you how to make your own painting in the iconic style.

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    Learn to paint like Picasso

  • Picasso's Blue Period was inspired by loss

    Picasso's friend Casagemas, a poet he met in Barcelona, died by suicide in 1901. The event shook the young Picasso, leading to what would later be called his Blue Period. The work from this time reflected the loss of Casagemas and others, as well as broader themes of suffering and marginalization in society, portraying their faces and other outcasts of society in elegiac hues of blue and other cold colors. The era is one of the artist’s most famous bodies of work, including several iconic paintings, such as "The Death of Casagemas," pictured below.

  • Picasso had several distinct periods

    Picasso was known for his ever-evolving style, which art historians have often divided into his artistic periods. Warmer color palettes and subjects characterized his Pink Period (sometimes called the Rose Period). Other phases focused on neoclassical, surrealist, and mythological art and subjects. Below is Family of Saltimbanques from the Pink Period.

  • Picasso is known as one of the creators of cubism

    In the early 1900s, cubism redefined modern art by breaking objects into geometric shapes and showing multiple perspectives at once. Developed by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, it challenged the idea that art should mirror reality, and laid the foundation for many movements that followed.

    Video 1440 Original

    The art movement created by Picasso

  • The 'Old Guitarist' challenged art's standards of beauty

    For much of Western art history, the definition of “beauty” in art was dictated by academies rather than personal taste. Artists like Picasso challenged these standards with works considered “ugly” for discarding anatomical accuracy or linear perspective in favor of a feeling.

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    How one Picasso painting challenged the art establishment

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