ADSactly Art: Marie-Thérèse's passion: Picasso
Marie-Thérèse's Passion: Picasso
As you already know, Pablo Picasso was a great Spanish painter and sculptor, creator and great exponent of that revolutionary trend that broke with the traditional representation of the image called Cubism. He is considered one of the most influential painters of his generation and of others after him. Famous as a womanizer, sentimental relationships passed quickly through his life and all of them were reflected in his paintings. We usually talk about seven relationships relevant to Picasso, but in this post we will focus on one of the most important of his muses: Marie-Thérèse Walter.
Picasso's first marriage was to Olga Khokhlova, a dancer from the iconic troop of the Ballets Russes. It was a difficult union because Olga belonged to a sophisticated and wealthy social circle, of which Picasso, despite his fame and prosperity, was not a part. He was in this half-broken relationship when he met Marie-Thérèse Walter. The story goes that she was 17 when she met Pablo Picasso, almost 50 years old. She was leaving the Lafayette department store in Paris and the painter noticed her and immediately embroidered her and said: "You have an interesting face. I'd like to do a portrait of you. I'm Picasso. From that moment, on January 8, 1927, the couple became inseparable and began a fundamental part of the Malaga painter's life.
A few months after that first meeting, Picasso bought an apartment on rue La Boetie, near the house where he lived and gave it to Marie-Thérèse. There he began to paint her and also there he began his love story making her not only his lover, but also his model and muse. The story says that although they had spent a couple of years together, they still hid their relationship with Olga Khokhlova and to see each other they resorted to tricks and ingenious tricks. In 1930 Picasso acquired Boisgeloup Castle, 60 kilometres from Paris. It is said that he told Olga that he had bought the castle for her, but that it was the same thing he told Marie-Thérèse. Most of the portraits he made of her belong to this period.
1932 and with the arrival of his new muse, Picasso had a time of much creativity and inspiration, it is said that he painted a work every day. At that time the straight and curved lines returned in his paintings, with a clear erotic connotation, giving a glimpse of the evident influence of the model and lover. His blond hair, blue eyes and white skin are the most admired portraits of the painter. In Picasso's paintings, Marie-Thérèse appears as blonde, sunny and brilliant, as in Le Rêve (1932) or the famous Nu au Plateau de Sculpteur (1932). It is said that she was the muse of more than 100 works, almost all of them with erotic themes.
In 1935, when Marie became pregnant, a friend of Olga, still Picasso's wife, informed her that her husband had a longstanding relationship with a woman who was expecting a child. With this confession, Olga immediately separated from Picasso and moved to the south of France with her son Paulo. It was believed that the couple's passionate relationship between Picasso and Marie would remain the same, but that was not the case. Their relationship changed with the arrival of their daughter, Maya. Picasso needed change once again. Although he had struggled to maintain a relationship with Marie-Thérèse, he began to tire again the home life, the cries of the girl, the daily routine. This is how the young blonde became painted like a madonna and the relationship cooled down. That same year the artist met the photographer Dora Marr, with whom he started a new relationship.
On October 20, 1977, four years after the death of Picasso, who had formed a couple with another woman, Marie-Thérèse committed suicide in the garage of her house. She was sixty-eight years old and since meeting Picasso she had lived imprisoned by the painter's love and shadow and as her daughter Maya later wrote: "she followed him to his grave, convinced that she had to take care of him even after his death". It is believed that Marie-Thérèse thought the same as Dora Maar, according to whom she said that "after Picasso, only God".
The clandestine relationship between Picasso and Marie-Thérèse has become an emblem of love, sex and desire in 20th century art and the paintings where she served as a model, in famous and highly prized works.
I hope you liked this new installment of these fascinating and immortal love stories. Remember to vote for @adsactly as a witness and join our server in discord. Until a next smile. ;)
BIBLIOGRAPHICAL REFERENCES
https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pablo_Picasso
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marie-Th%C3%A9r%C3%A8se_Walter
http://www.tiempodehoy.com/cultura/las-mujeres-de-picasso/
Written by: @nancybriti
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These impossible, clandestine and complex loves still exist throughout the world. Picasso made the most of this relationship and this love and when the flame of passion was extinguished, surely immersed in everyday life, he left leaving a broken heart in love that followed him beyond death. Love and its mysteries. Thank you, @nancybriti for this publication and @adsactly for sharing it.
Wowo...first time i have heard of this story. An artist and their obsession for a great theme...and it keep changing with time. With so many relation Picaso must be a great love maker. Her obcession for Marie and impriosing her from society for long sgows his attraction for the blonde beauty. The inseperable love , ended only with the entry of another women in his life.
Sorry to ask, is famedom gives people liberty to get into multiple relationship? Or it is the Money that allows such multiple relation so easy.
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I liked the end of your article, I did not know about this passionate love, always the success or the failure of a man carries the name of a woman.
Definitely the success of this exemplary homme is called Marie-Thérèse.
With your well-crafted posts, @nancybriti, you continue to expand our references to such an eye-catching subject as the stormy love affairs of our contemporary artists. There is no doubt that modern artists have been touched by nonconformity, libertine life and dissipation, without carrying these qualifications of pejorative meaning, from Romanticism onwards. And that seems to be an imprint of modern life, accentuated by the personal character of each individual.
Picasso was -as testimonies of himself and his friends (Buñuel, Lorca, among others)- an individuality of an unobjectionable creative force, almost titanic, but, for that very reason, unbalanced; and it can be clearly seen in his love life.
I congratulate you on the excellent illustrations of Picasso's work that accompany your text. Thanks to @adsactly for sharing it. Greetings.
Enlightement post.
The beauty of Picasso's painting have many story. .
And the wonan always inspire him to build the beautiful paintings. Realtionship and the mix of emition love and blood of art have rise picasso's passion to make huge work, which very monumental work. By your pist the reader can see that behind the good job there was a woman who give spirit and motivation. But sometime she can be a "bomb" to destruction the artist. So, we can learn and take good lesson from your post.
Thank you @nancybriti
Thank you @adsactly
Thank you steemit
Warm regard from indonesia
good article
There is incredible power in the arts to inspire and influence.
also watch my arts
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What a great publication full of love, heartbreak, and paintings by the famous Spanish painter Pablo Picasso!
He was a womanizer, cubist and Master of new trends for painting in the early nineteenth century. His love affairs, his muses, gave him the inspiration to make pictorial works of enormous revolution (for the time). Many times we can not separate Picasso from eroticism, and the eroticism of his muses, and his muses from his women.
The concubine relationship of Picasso and the young Marie-Thérèse is as you say a reference of passion, desire and lust in the intricate ways of art.
I think it was not an impossible love because they loved each other, perhaps in extreme madness, but they loved each other. Undoubtedly, it is an unforgettable love story for all the intrigulis that particularly lived the heart of Marie-Thérèse.
Thanks @nancybriti
Thanks @adsactly
Waiting for the media to announce that we will be having a Pablo Picasso in today's world again.
Such a brilliant man.