Art adapts to the influences of past artists, society, and current events, and it will develop over time. Recently, art seems to be subjective, and artists and audiences can interpret art. An article entitled 'Past Piracy' in John Richardson 's Picasso' s lifetime discusses how an artist 's viewer should see artwork and artists influence his creation Try to see the method. These effects may have come from the days of past artists and past art history, or they may be influenced by social events.
"Many artists are extremely prolific through middle-ages, Spain's Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) is the most prolific painter of his career for 75 years.Starring (about 78800 $ 10,000) Picasso is a skilled pioneer of all art movement of the century, his design, 100,000 prints and prints, illustrations of 34,000 books and 300 sculptures and pottery (Guinness World Record)
Pablo Picasso (1881 - 1973) is a prolific artist whose work expresses various art movement. Picasso was the son of an art teacher, born in Barcelona, Spain. One of the various techniques of Picasso experiment is Cubism. This technique combines seemingly fragmented planar images. It is a combination of shapes used to express the feelings of artists. Picasso was educated in past masters, but he was called a contemporary painter. Until 1913 and the famous arsenal exhibition in New York, most Americans knew little about the cubism movement. This is the first time that a radical new European art appeared in an important art exhibition. Most of the programs (two-thirds) are based on real life of American mainstream art and are targeted at American contemporary artists, but do not forget to introduce contemporary art to Americans .
In the beginning of the 20th century, Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque used items that were not artistic in their work. In 1912, Picasso stuck a waterproof sheet on the canvas. Picasso's later work (1913), including guitar, newspaper, glass, bottle, etc., using the shape of a newspaper clipping, was classified as a comprehensive cuevist. The two artists integrated all aspects of the "real world" into the canvas and began discussions on meaning and artistic expression.