i think it is painting on canvas that's what my art teacher told me. but im not sure.
pablo picasso did not have respect for his women this was what people called the blue period
The Weeping Woman, painted by Pablo Picasso in 1937, is often interpreted as reflecting the emotional turmoil resulting from the Spanish Civil War. While the painting itself does not explicitly denote a specific time of day, the use of stark colors and distorted forms suggests a sense of chaos and anguish rather than a serene setting. The overall mood may evoke the darker hours, symbolizing grief and despair rather than a clear time of day.
Not in that portrait, no. It is simply a weeping woman.This picture however, was painted because Picasso responded to the bombing of the Spanish town, Guernica during the Spanish Civil war by painting the huge mural Guernica, and for months afterwards he made paintings based on one of the figures in the mural: a weeping woman holding her dead child. (Both the figure in Guernica and in Weeping Woman are based on Dora Maar, Picasso's mistress from 1936 until 1944 and also a photographer and artist herself. Dora Marr was infertile and mentally unstable. The dead baby and the weeping are both meant to show both of these aspects of her.
No but i am not sure what kind of painting it is
because he saw that she was sad and and depressed because her just newborn babywas going to die because there was wars back then
pablo picasso did not have respect for his women this was what people called the blue period
Dora Marr
The Weeping Woman, painted by Pablo Picasso in 1937, is often interpreted as reflecting the emotional turmoil resulting from the Spanish Civil War. While the painting itself does not explicitly denote a specific time of day, the use of stark colors and distorted forms suggests a sense of chaos and anguish rather than a serene setting. The overall mood may evoke the darker hours, symbolizing grief and despair rather than a clear time of day.
green yellow purple white + blue
Purple Robe and Anemones is a rectangular canvas. It features a women in a purple robe sitting next to a table. On the table is a vase of red and white anemones. It was painted by Henri Matisse.
Not in that portrait, no. It is simply a weeping woman.This picture however, was painted because Picasso responded to the bombing of the Spanish town, Guernica during the Spanish Civil war by painting the huge mural Guernica, and for months afterwards he made paintings based on one of the figures in the mural: a weeping woman holding her dead child. (Both the figure in Guernica and in Weeping Woman are based on Dora Maar, Picasso's mistress from 1936 until 1944 and also a photographer and artist herself. Dora Marr was infertile and mentally unstable. The dead baby and the weeping are both meant to show both of these aspects of her.
60 times 49 cm.
No but i am not sure what kind of painting it is
No, it was not.
Nicolas poussin
The beginning of it all was in the Spanish Civil War. German planes bombed a small town, Guernica, which was not a military target. Picasso wanted to show the suffering and painted his famous 'Guernica''. His mistress, Dora Maar, a photographer, was with him during this work, documenting it all in photos. The painting and all the sketches he made kept haunting him, and he made a series of weeping women with Dora Maar as his model.
Paul Gauguin