The Spanish Portrait: From El Greco to Picasso


The Spanish Portrait: From El Greco to Picasso

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Secure and stable bicycle holder that is secured to the tailgate using the quick attachments. The bicycle holder is easy to fit onto and remove from the car and can be folded up when not in use. Full instructions included + fitting kit (RRP ?5).
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Picasso & Lump: A Dachshund’s Odyssey Customer Review: Beware identical book
I bought this book for my wife, a Dachshund lover, who already has “Lump: The Dog Who Ate A Picasso” by the same author. I presumed that “A Dachshund’s Odyssey” would be a follow-up, but it is not; apart from the slightly different dust jackets, these two books are IDENTICAL. And Amazon have the nerve to be offering the two together at a special price!

If you don’t already have either of these books and you like Daxies or are interested in Picasso, then it probably rates three stars. If you already have one of these titles, for goodness sake don’t buy the other.

Pablo Picasso: Pablo Picasso - Google Books Result

Pablo Picasso

Picasso (Colour Library)


Picasso (Colour Library)

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REVIEW: New Café 36 menu at museum shines with fantastic dishes - Colorado Springs Gazette
“Art,” Pablo Picasso said, “is a lie that makes us realize the truth.” This line came to mind on a recent visit to the Fine Arts Center’s Café 36 when a woman at the table next to me took the first bite of a dish of polenta drizzled with roasted

Palo Alto Online’s Master Community Calendar - Palo Alto Online
Group show of small works. Show runs Jan. 9-Feb. 10, Free. For more information, call Pixie Couch at 650-701-1018 or e-mail pixiec@mindspring.com or visit www.themaingallery.org . The Main Gallery, 1018 Main St., Redwood City “Sally Kunstadter: A

Art Activity Pack: Picasso (Art Activity Pack)

Picasso the Green Tree Frog (Era Keystone Paperback)


Picasso the Green Tree Frog (Era Keystone Paperback)

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Replacement mirror glasses are an easy solution to a very annoying problem. Simply peel off the adhesive backing on the back of the mirror glass, position over the smashed mirror and stick firmly over. Every mirror glass comes with fitting instructions.If the mirror glass on your vehicle has been lost or removed entirely, this mirror glass may not be the right solution. In this case you may need a ‘Mirror Glass with Backing Plate’ which comes complete with the plastic cradle to attach into the mirror housing. Please visit doctorcarparts shop/website and search ‘Mirror Glass with Backing Plate’ to see if there is one for your vehicle
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All Guardian Stories - Guardian Unlimited
Gordon Brown: West must not give up on aid and climate change Crazy Bones: Children turned into smugglers as schools crack down on the great Gogo’s craze Zimbabwe: How an angry prison officer with a secret camera shamed a tyrant Zimbabwe: prison

US record-holder Greer fails in javelin - Boston Globe
EUGENE, Ore. - Give the men’s javelin field credit for being colorful. From the pink, black, and white spiked hairdo of American record-holder Breaux Greer to the multicolored striped uniforms and matching javelins of the “Olympic Picasso,” Roald

Creating Minds: An Anatomy of Creativity Seen Through the Lives of Freud, Einstein, Picasso, Stravinsky, Eliot, Graham and Gandhi Customer Review: Best Overview of Similarities in Creative Lives
Many have written about creativity, but few have considered creativity in the context of a cognitive model. Professor Gardner has added greatly to my understanding of what creative people’s lives are like, by focusing on people from a variety of fields (from politics, to dance, to music, to physics, to poetry).

A key lesson for me was that creativity can cause problems for the creative person. Having seen some of the bad habits outlined in this book, we can each see how we can become more creative and also avoid some of the pitfalls. Clearly, creativity can become an obsession, since it turns out to be so pleasurable to creative people. Creative people would clearly benefit from a series of questions that prompt them into considering the relevance and approriateness of their lives. I especially liked how Professor Gardner suggested what additional research should be done. I hope someone is working on these questions, now.

I am a business person, and did not expect to learn much that would help in business. I was happily surprised to find that I did. An important lesson is that creative people need the right kind of emotional and social support in order to be most effective in not only creating more, but also in making their creations more useful for us all. I also recommend CREATIVITY IN CONTEXT and CORPORATE CREATIVITY, as good books for business people to read on the subject of creativity.

But having read many dozens of books on creativity, I still recommend that you start with this one.
Customer Review: An interesting book examining the creative process.
I found this book to be a very interesting read. As a public educator, I a enjoy books that take me out of the framework or box that I view the learning process. Creative Minds made me examine and understand the creative process over a span of a lifetime and mentally note the types of blockers in the early lives of these extraordinary individuals. The book also emphasized for me the differing intelligences in the human race and the conditions necessary for creative breakthroughs. Creating Minds is an excellent reflective read for public educators

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The Ultimate Picasso


The Ultimate Picasso
If you had to choose just one book about Pablo Picasso, the most protean artist of the 20th century, what would you look for? Copious, good-quality reproductions; an authoritative account of the way his approach to painting was influenced by his personality, the women in his life and his contemporaneousness with other notables; an in-depth treatment of key works–like Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (his self-proclaimed “first exorcism painting”)–and recurrent themes, like the Minotaur. Then there’s the question of tone. Some books cast Picasso as a demigod or a destroyer. Others, like art historian John Richardson’s A Life of Picasso, offer a more responsible, psychologically penetrating portrait of the artist.

Hefty, elegant, and inclusive, The Ultimate Picasso hits most of these marks. It boasts more than 1,200 reproductions spanning the artist’s entire career. Smoothly translated from the French, the it weaves biographical detail and discussions of the art into a concise narrative. Visual sources are all confidently accounted for. Yet the text does seem rather skimpy. The 16-page section on Guernica, for example, has barely two pages of actual discussion. The authors maintain their extremely tight focus on their artist, which is admirable. But in their concentration, they seem to compulsively refrain, perhaps by default, from acknowledging the external world as anything but resource or dalliance for their subject.

The authors’ hyperbolic view of their subject–”Picasso did not paint nature, but the suffering of the men and women of his time, creating from it beauty and truth”–and the lack of any real psychological insight about, for instance, the continual hazard Picasso poses to the female form, may be considered a flaw. But in this old-fashioned portrait of the male artist as genius, so certain is it of the gulf between the common and the exalted, human flaw does not exist, unless it belongs to somebody else. –Cathy Curtis

Customer Review: The Ultimate art book
This is a book “that does exactly what it says on the tin”. I particularly liked the format, which is compact and easy to handle.

This is an accessible book with clear text, copiously illustrated. It contains everything you would ever want to know about Picasso and his life and art. I would highly recommend “The Ultimate Picasso”.

Customer Review: Truly the Ultimate!
This book stands out alone as a definitive reference dealing with Picasso’s working life. The text is both authoritative and comprehensive,yet gripping, in its unfolding of the thinking and creative energy that was Picasso. The greatest jewel of this wonderful work surely lies in the superb quality of the photography and printing, faithfully reproducing colour form and detail of all his major works. This book is a “must have” for people who are interested in art, but perhaps more important, in getting an insight into one of the greatest influences in the development of visual expression,thinking and communication ever.

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Trexus Picasso Cafe Chair Back H360mm Seat W470xD550xH450mm Beech [Pack 4]
Please note that due to the size and weight of this product delivery may take up to 5 days

Paloma Picasso Perfume For Women 30ml EDP Spray


Picasso Erotic Sketchbook (Prestel’s Erotic Sketchbook)

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Matisse Picasso


Matisse Picasso

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If you had to choose just one book about Pablo Picasso, the most protean artist of the 20th century, what would you look for? Copious, good-quality reproductions; an authoritative account of the way his approach to painting was influenced by his personality, the women in his life and his contemporaneousness with other notables; an in-depth treatment of key works–like Les Demoiselles d’Avignon (his self-proclaimed “first exorcism painting”)–and recurrent themes, like the Minotaur. Then there’s the question of tone. Some books cast Picasso as a demigod or a destroyer. Others, like art historian John Richardson’s A Life of Picasso, offer a more responsible, psychologically penetrating portrait of the artist.

Hefty, elegant, and inclusive, The Ultimate Picasso hits most of these marks. It boasts more than 1,200 reproductions spanning the artist’s entire career. Smoothly translated from the French, the it weaves biographical detail and discussions of the art into a concise narrative. Visual sources are all confidently accounted for. Yet the text does seem rather skimpy. The 16-page section on Guernica, for example, has barely two pages of actual discussion. The authors maintain their extremely tight focus on their artist, which is admirable. But in their concentration, they seem to compulsively refrain, perhaps by default, from acknowledging the external world as anything but resource or dalliance for their subject.

The authors’ hyperbolic view of their subject–”Picasso did not paint nature, but the suffering of the men and women of his time, creating from it beauty and truth”–and the lack of any real psychological insight about, for instance, the continual hazard Picasso poses to the female form, may be considered a flaw. But in this old-fashioned portrait of the male artist as genius, so certain is it of the gulf between the common and the exalted, human flaw does not exist, unless it belongs to somebody else. –Cathy Curtis
Customer Review: The Ultimate art book
This is a book “that does exactly what it says on the tin”. I particularly liked the format, which is compact and easy to handle. This is an accessible book with clear text, copiously illustrated. It contains everything you would ever want to know about Picasso and his life and art. I would highly recommend “The Ultimate Picasso”.
Customer Review: Truly the Ultimate!
This book stands out alone as a definitive reference dealing with Picasso’s working life. The text is both authoritative and comprehensive,yet gripping, in its unfolding of the thinking and creative energy that was Picasso. The greatest jewel of this wonderful work surely lies in the superb quality of the photography and printing, faithfully reproducing colour form and detail of all his major works. This book is a “must have” for people who are interested in art, but perhaps more important, in getting an insight into one of the greatest influences in the development of visual expression,thinking and communication ever.
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Gordon Brown: West must not give up on aid and climate change Crazy Bones: Children turned into smugglers as schools crack down on the great Gogo’s craze Zimbabwe: How an angry prison officer with a secret camera shamed a tyrant Zimbabwe: prison Continue

Matisse and Picasso Customer Review: manifique
It was a birthday present to me, and it has to be the best book i’ve read on two fabulous artists. Loads of illustrations to compare the two artists work showing how they competed against each other. All in all a fabulous and well illustrated book.

Pablo Picasso: Breaking All the Rules: Breaking All the Rules (Smart about the Arts)


Pablo Picasso: Breaking All the Rules: Breaking All the Rules (Smart about the Arts)

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Customer Review: Excellent value
The two volume book is arranged in seventeen chapters concluding with a considerable Chronology illustrated with numerous black and white pictures, mostly photographs with many of the artist, Notes, a Bibliography which includes exhibition catalogues, and a rather brief (one page) Index of Names. The opening Chapter reminds us of the stature of the man, and of his prodigious output; briefly summarising his career. The subsequent Chapters chronicle Picasso’s progress starting with his childhood efforts, through the Blue and Rose Periods, Cubism, “Guernica” to mention just a few and concluding with “The Legend of the Artist”. It is intelligently written, accessible and makes very interesting reading. The illustrations run with the text and are usually within a page or two of the relevant reference. Produced in two paperback volumes in a cardboard slipcase Taschen’s 25 anniversary edition is an impressive effort. It is superbly illustrated throughout with approaching 1,500 images mainly in colour but with a few back and white (usually drawings or photographs). The smallest pictures are just thumbnails, the largest full page and the occasional double page spread, with every size between; but there are plenty of good sized pictures with whole sections of colour plates, it certainly makes an impressive array. Overall the pictures far outweigh the text. At such good value for money it is hard to be critical of this two volume set, but I fear I have two concerns. Firstly the Index seems wholly inadequate, an Index of Names which amounts to one page; finding a particular painting or anything else might prove difficult. Secondly, while the two volumes come protected in a slipcase, the card covers to the individual volumes feel very slight; with each approaching 400 pages one feels one has to handle them with great care for fear of damaging the binding. It is however a very worthwhile set, one would be hard pressed to find so many reproductions of Picasso’s work elsewhere for the money, and would not hesitate to recommend it.
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“Art,” Pablo Picasso said, “is a lie that makes us realize the truth.” This line came to mind on a recent visit to the Fine Arts Center’s Café 36 when a woman at the table next to me took the first bite of a dish of polenta drizzled with roasted Continue

Lump: The Dog Who Ate a Picasso

To Hell with Picasso and Other Essays: Selected Pieces from the “Spectator”


To Hell with Picasso and Other Essays: Selected Pieces from the “Spectator”
Customer Review: Courageous Opinions
In these short, easily digested essays, Paul Johnson says what academics and intellectuals dare not say, even if some of them secretly share these opinions - for example, that modern art is a sham; that many of the pre-Impressionist painters captured the qualilty of light better than the Impressionists did; that for excellent but reasonably-priced champaign you must buy Italian, not French; that the Mitterand regime was an elite coterie that cared nothing for the common people; that (in his wonderful words) “the great non-event of the 20th century was the Death of God.” Each essay is a gem. I hope Paul Johnson (who is now about 70) continues to write until he is 100.

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Customer Review: Touching story of art and how Picasso helped a little girl
I read this on my honeymoon when I found it in a little shop at the shop in the Picasso museum in Barcelona. Its fantastic - a very touching story of how Picasso made a little girl feel special and helped her to grow up. At the same time, it explores Picassos art and explains how his work developed over time, from his Blue period to Abstractism. A great way to introduce children to the world of art and ideas - and part of a great series by Laurence Anholt. Thoroughly enjoyable for adults and children.
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Picasso (25 Spring) Customer Review: Excellent value
The two volume book is arranged in seventeen chapters concluding with a considerable Chronology illustrated with numerous black and white pictures, mostly photographs with many of the artist, Notes, a Bibliography which includes exhibition catalogues, and a rather brief (one page) Index of Names.

The opening Chapter reminds us of the stature of the man, and of his prodigious output; briefly summarising his career. The subsequent Chapters chronicle Picasso’s progress starting with his childhood efforts, through the Blue and Rose Periods, Cubism, “Guernica” to mention just a few and concluding with “The Legend of the Artist”. It is intelligently written, accessible and makes very interesting reading. The illustrations run with the text and are usually within a page or two of the relevant reference.

Produced in two paperback volumes in a cardboard slipcase Taschen’s 25 anniversary edition is an impressive effort. It is superbly illustrated throughout with approaching 1,500 images mainly in colour but with a few back and white (usually drawings or photographs). The smallest pictures are just thumbnails, the largest full page and the occasional double page spread, with every size between; but there are plenty of good sized pictures with whole sections of colour plates, it certainly makes an impressive array. Overall the pictures far outweigh the text.

At such good value for money it is hard to be critical of this two volume set, but I fear I have two concerns. Firstly the Index seems wholly inadequate, an Index of Names which amounts to one page; finding a particular painting or anything else might prove difficult. Secondly, while the two volumes come protected in a slipcase, the card covers to the individual volumes feel very slight; with each approaching 400 pages one feels one has to handle them with great care for fear of damaging the binding. It is however a very worthwhile set, one would be hard pressed to find so many reproductions of Picasso’s work elsewhere for the money,
and would not hesitate to recommend it.

Picasso & Lump: A Dachshund’s Odyssey


Picasso & Lump: A Dachshund’s Odyssey
Customer Review: Beware identical book
I bought this book for my wife, a Dachshund lover, who already has “Lump: The Dog Who Ate A Picasso” by the same author. I presumed that “A Dachshund’s Odyssey” would be a follow-up, but it is not; apart from the slightly different dust jackets, these two books are IDENTICAL. And Amazon have the nerve to be offering the two together at a special price!

If you don’t already have either of these books and you like Daxies or are interested in Picasso, then it probably rates three stars. If you already have one of these titles, for goodness sake don’t buy the other.

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Continue …

Sealey ES200-15 - Use with Base Unit ES200 to support/raise engine from underneath during maintenance operations without use of a trolley jack or conventional over-engine support beam. Allows unimpeded access to the engine from above and also permits safe movement of the vehicle whilst the engine is raised. Vehicle-specific adaptor sleeve mounts onto the vehicle structure and takes the support beam. Engine is raised by a screw adjusted pad. Vital for rapid and safe cam belt changes, engine mount replacement, transmission removal, etc.
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BAD news Brenda may be heading back to ” 90210 .” Picasso-faced Playboy pin-up Shannen Doherty, who was dumped in 1994 for bad behavior from her career-making stint as ” Beverly Hills 90210 ” brat Brenda Walsh, is in talks with the producers of the Continue

Picasso’s Line Drawings and Prints (Dover Art Library)

Mr. Picasso Head

Art Activity Pack: Picasso (Art Activity Pack)


Art Activity Pack: Picasso (Art Activity Pack)

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BAD news Brenda may be heading back to “90210.” Picasso-faced Playboy pin-up Shannen Doherty, who was dumped in 1994 from her career-making stint as “Beverly Hills 90210″ brat Brenda Walsh for bad behavior, is in talks with the producers of the new Continue

So, you are a passionate collector of antiques. A connoisseur. You know your Picasso from Dali. Or maybe you are into blue pottery. Whatever you collect, you may be aware that for every original sold in the market, there are at least five fakes that Continue

Life with Picasso Customer Review: A wonderful insight into real life with Picasso
This book follows the decade or so that Francoise Gilot and Picasso were lovers, and covers their day-to-day lives, their discussions on art, their friends (Matisse, Gertrude Stein, Braque etc) and their children (Paloma and Claude). It’s a wonderful biography, beautifully written and very evocative. You admire Francoise for sticking with Picasso for so long and are amazed at the genius that he was.

A great read whether or not you are interested in Picasso and his art.

Pablo Picasso : Le site officiel

Creating Minds: An Anatomy of Creativity Seen Through the Lives of Freud, Einstein, Picasso, Stravinsky, Eliot, Graham and Gandhi


Creating Minds: An Anatomy of Creativity Seen Through the Lives of Freud, Einstein, Picasso, Stravinsky, Eliot, Graham and Gandhi
Customer Review: Best Overview of Similarities in Creative Lives
Many have written about creativity, but few have considered creativity in the context of a cognitive model. Professor Gardner has added greatly to my understanding of what creative people’s lives are like, by focusing on people from a variety of fields (from politics, to dance, to music, to physics, to poetry).

A key lesson for me was that creativity can cause problems for the creative person. Having seen some of the bad habits outlined in this book, we can each see how we can become more creative and also avoid some of the pitfalls. Clearly, creativity can become an obsession, since it turns out to be so pleasurable to creative people. Creative people would clearly benefit from a series of questions that prompt them into considering the relevance and approriateness of their lives. I especially liked how Professor Gardner suggested what additional research should be done. I hope someone is working on these questions, now.

I am a business person, and did not expect to learn much that would help in business. I was happily surprised to find that I did. An important lesson is that creative people need the right kind of emotional and social support in order to be most effective in not only creating more, but also in making their creations more useful for us all. I also recommend CREATIVITY IN CONTEXT and CORPORATE CREATIVITY, as good books for business people to read on the subject of creativity.

But having read many dozens of books on creativity, I still recommend that you start with this one.

Customer Review: An interesting book examining the creative process.
I found this book to be a very interesting read. As a public educator, I a enjoy books that take me out of the framework or box that I view the learning process. Creative Minds made me examine and understand the creative process over a span of a lifetime and mentally note the types of blockers in the early lives of these extraordinary individuals. The book also emphasized for me the differing intelligences in the human race and the conditions necessary for creative breakthroughs. Creating Minds is an excellent reflective read for public educators

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Picasso Customer Review: The Most Unusual Biography Ever?
One of the most engaging, stylistically intriguing and honest books I’ve ever read. Stein’s writing is impatient, brusque, passionate and scarily insightful. She offers a real sense of Picasso - the man and the artist - as well as of Gertrude Stein herself. It also provides a tantalising glimpse into the wonderful, romantic life enjoyed by writers, artists and their cronies in early twentieth century Paris. Brilliant. If you care at all about art; life; Picasso; the notion of genius; Paris; indeed, creative or intellectual pursuits of any kind, then your life will be slightly less if you fail to read this book.

Picasso

Pablo Picasso Paintings Prints and Biography

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