San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

The Picasso puzzle

The late biographer John Richardson’s investigat­ion into the Spanish artist ends with his fourth volume, ‘The Minotaur Years’

- BY SEBASTIAN SMEE

John Richardson, who died in 2019, set the standard for modern artists’ biographie­s with the first three volumes of his Pablo Picasso biography. The first was published in 1991.

The fourth and final volume, covering the 10 years after Adolf Hitler came to power and ceasing, unfortunat­ely, three full decades before Picasso’s death in 1973, is a worthy follow-up to its predecesso­rs. Completed in difficult circumstan­ces — Richardson was in his 90s and going blind — it is only about half their length. But it is just as rich, just as astounding.

The volume, subtitled “The Minotaur Years,” unfolds against the backdrop of the rise of fascism, the Spanish Civil War and the Second World War. It covers Picasso’s complicate­d relations with the surrealist­s; his engagement with the irrational side of Greek mythology; his fraught relationsh­ip with his native Spain; a period when he decided to stop painting and focus on writing poetry; the creation of his masterpiec­e “Guernica”; and his experience­s during the Nazi occupation of Paris.

Picasso was deeply involved in the formation of the myth that surrounds him, which presents a problem for would-be biographer­s. The myth was of unbridled invention, of creative fecundity almost as an end in itself.

Of course, if you have seen a lot of Picassos, you know that not everything he made was of great interest. And yet those who seek to dismiss the prolific Spaniard as some sort of unstoppabl­e gusher or helpless savant are responding to a caricature. Picasso made masterpiec­es galore. He was not only absurdly gifted; he was terrifying­ly intelligen­t.

And he was also, of course, immensely manipulati­ve. Despite his charm and the long line of smart and formidable women who fell in love with him, he was also — as Richardson makes clear — an emotional monster, whose urge to humiliate was constantly manifestin­g itself in his art.

What biographer would contemplat­e taking on such a complicate­d subject? You would need to be the perfect person for the job — to have just the right combinatio­n of masochism, tenacity, disinteres­t and dauntlessn­ess.

Engulfed in melodrama

Richardson was the perfect person — a marvelous, no-nonsense prose stylist with a gift for bold character sketches, a fierce dedication to concrete facts, deep curiosity about images and a command of irony. The most entertaini­ng and well-connected of men, Richardson had befriended

Picasso in the 1950s. He maintained good relations not only with Picasso but also with his heirs and exlovers.

The first three volumes, published at increasing­ly lengthy intervals, were written with a collaborat­or, Marilyn Mccully. This fourth volume was made possible by Delphine Huisinga and Ross Finocchio, who did much of the research, allowing Richardson to concentrat­e on the writing. According to Richardson’s friend David Dawson, Finocchio “sat with (Richardson) every morning rereading his writing back to him as John’s eyesight was failing,” while Huisinga would work in the library.

In 1933, when the book starts, Picasso’s private life was engulfed in a melodrama of his own making. At the same time, different factions of the surrealist­s were fighting over him in ways that mirrored his love life. It feels like pop psychology to say so, but on some level, he seemed to need to be fought over. Part of him clearly welcomed the chaos.

Richardson has consistent­ly emphasized Picasso’s relationsh­ips with women as a key to understand­ing his art. So here we learn about the bitter and protracted end of his marriage to the ballerina Olga Khokhlova, his affair with photograph­er and painter Dora Maar, his ongoing relationsh­ip with model Marie-thérèse Walter, and his first meeting with painter Françoise Gilot.

Given the psychosexu­al complexity he cultivated, it’s little surprise that Picasso identified with the Minotaur — part bull, part man — who did battle in Greek mythology with Theseus in King Minos’ Cretan labyrinth. Some of his greatest works from this decade draw on the Minotaur, or on bulls and bullfighti­ng, always with some degree of identifica­tion.

The blind Minotaur, in particular, haunted Picasso. “For a superstiti­ous artist whose creativity derived in part from the mirada fuerte (strong gaze), prized by Andalusian­s as a source of sexual power, blindness represente­d a vital loss,” Richardson wrote. “The equation of vision, sexuality, and art making is the key that often unlocks the meaning of Picasso’s work.”

The magic of Picasso

Cubism, which Picasso invented together with Georges Braque, had made an asset of concealmen­t and ambiguity, firmly establishi­ng an idea that, for better or worse, prevailed over the rest of Picasso’s career: that his paintings are there to be “solved.”

When it suited him, Picasso freely handed out interpreti­ve “keys” to his own work. He once turned to Richardson, as the two sat in the crowd at a bullfight in Nimes, in southern France, and said: “Those horses” — he meant the horses the tormented bulls were trying to disembowel — “are the women in my life.”

“One has to commit a painting in the same way one commits a crime,” said Edgar Degas, an artist Picasso revered. So it seems fitting that Richardson has approached Picasso’s oeuvre in the spirit of a detective. The life, in a sense, is the crime scene. His speculatio­ns can be thrilling. There are many Eureka moments, often relating to the ongoing significan­ce of the death of Picasso’s sister Conchita. But he never claims his interpreta­tions are definitive.

Of a charcoal drawing made at the end of 1933, Richardson suggests that the surrealist figure’s “disembodie­d eyeballs” may be related to a horrific crime committed that year. Two sisters, Christine and Léa Papin, who worked as maids, had murdered the mistress of the house and her daughter. They gouged out their victims’ eyes and slashed the mother’s “thighs and buttocks in the same way she would score a rabbit for roasting.” During the trial, Christine Papin had violent fits and tried to pluck out her own eyes.

The trial caused a sensation in the French press. Marxists wrote about the class implicatio­ns of the crime, while the psychoanal­yst Jacques Lacan, in an essay published in Minotaure (a surrealist publicatio­n to which Picasso had also contribute­d) attributed the sisters’ “orgie sanglante” (bloody orgy) to psychosis. Picasso discussed the crime with Lacan. But he was not convinced that the sisters were insane. His objection was philosophi­cal. “Today’s psychiatri­sts are the enemies of tragedy, and of saintlines­s,” he said. “Saying that the Papin sisters are mad means getting rid of that admirable thing called sin.”

In interestin­g ways, Picasso’s stance here reflects back on Richardson’s project. A brilliant detective, Richardson is continuall­y solving “crimes” (read “artworks”) by tracing them back to Picasso’s lovers and his dead sister. It’s mostly convincing, but it starts to feel reductive.

Just as Picasso saw psychiatri­sts as the enemies of a deeper vision of life and death, biographer­s may be the enemies of a deeper conception of art. If everything is explained in biographic­al terms, you may lose “that admirable thing” called ambiguity.

Richardson’s big thesis is that Picasso saw art in terms of magic, especially of exorcism and sacrifice. I think he is basically right. What is hard to swallow is the repetitive­ness of Richardson’s idea of Picasso’s particular brand of “magic,” which so often sprouts from his feelings about the women in his life.

The fault, perhaps, is not Richardson’s. You expect a biographer to emphasize biographic­al readings. But it’s a caution that we might apply more generally. What we know about an artist’s life shouldn’t be recruited to secure us against what is wild and unknown in his or her art. Art can be puzzling, but that doesn’t mean we have to solve it. The will to “solve” or even “understand” art is not the only — and not the best — form of attention we can pay it.

Smee is an art critic for The Washington Post.

 ?? ?? “A Life of Picasso IV: The Minotaur Years 1933-1943” by John Richardson (Knopf, 2021; 320 pages)
“A Life of Picasso IV: The Minotaur Years 1933-1943” by John Richardson (Knopf, 2021; 320 pages)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States