Picasso's Many Muses

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  • Опубліковано 19 січ 2020
  • Pablo Picasso was one of the most important and prolific artists of the twentieth century. But his art came at a price for those who loved him. The History Guy recalls the many loves of Pablo Picasso.
    This is original content based on research by The History Guy. Images in the Public Domain are carefully selected and provide illustration. As images of actual events are sometimes not available, images of similar objects and events are used for illustration.
    All events are portrayed in historical context and for educational purposes. No images or content are primarily intended to shock and disgust. Those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it. Non censuram.
    Find The History Guy at:
    Facebook: / thehistoryguyyt
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    The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered is the place to find short snippets of forgotten history from five to fifteen minutes long. If you like history too, this is the channel for you.
    Subscribe for more forgotten history: / @thehistoryguychannel .
    Awesome The History Guy merchandise is available at:
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    Script by HCW
    #arthistory #thehistoryguy #picasso

КОМЕНТАРІ • 490

  • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
    @TheHistoryGuyChannel  4 роки тому +134

    Many of the women profiled here do not have photographs that are in the Public Domain. Likewise, most of his artistic works created after 1924 have also not entered the Public Domain. As ever, we respect copyright, so please excuse us where we do not have a photograph of the subject.

    • @TensileStrength
      @TensileStrength 4 роки тому +7

      I didn't realize photos for you videos could be so difficult to find.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  4 роки тому +40

      TensileStrength absolutely. For many episodes, collecting media is more difficult than writing the script. As a general rule, anything published before 1924 or taken by a US government employee as part of their job is in the Public Domain. Outside those rules, rights can be difficult. Newspapers, understandably, protect photos taken by their employees. People who own the rights to a Picasso, understandably, move to protect the image to preserve its value. Where we can, we directly request rights, but our production schedule doesn’t allow for a lot of time for that discussion. I understand that some content producers on UA-cam are less scrupulous, assuming rights holders won’t act. But I want people to respect my content rights, and so work hard to respect the rights of others.
      In this case, Picasso’s muses were mostly not public figures. Their photos are either theirs or were taken for interviews published recently enough that they are still under copyright.
      Note, though, that the fact that I could not use an image in a monetized video does not prevent viewers from doing a web search and viewing images online.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  4 роки тому +34

      Uncle Boss I am honestly unsure why this episode is particularly unfit for the day. We do not always post new episodes based on the day involved, although sometimes we do.
      This is history. These women deserve to be remembered, as does the life of a very famous person.

    • @Silverado138
      @Silverado138 4 роки тому +9

      @@uncleboss4421 I don't think MLK will ever be forgotten unlike the women in this video that it was about 🤷🏻‍♂️ but to be technical Martin Luther King's birthday was the 15th

    • @Pygar2
      @Pygar2 4 роки тому +1

      @@TheHistoryGuyChannel Alma Maria Mahler Gropius Werfel is also history that deseves to be remembered... not for nothing did Tom Lehrer write a song about her!

  • @hickory572
    @hickory572 4 роки тому +49

    By the way i got my 89 year old dad hooked on watching you channel. He fought in ww2 in the Guam and other islands. He was a SeaBee. If you could do a few bits about them that would be so cool.

    • @ronfullerton3162
      @ronfullerton3162 4 роки тому +5

      Tim Hazel Hopefully you r father has made it to the seabee museum at Port Hueneme, California. I have a son in law there, and visited the museum while visiting he and his family last spring. Very wonderful museum to honor great men.

    • @garywiseman5080
      @garywiseman5080 4 роки тому +6

      The Seabee’s were very famous during and after the war, and were the subject of at least one Hollywood movie. My Grandfather was one. They are certainly becoming forgotten history now.

    • @ronfullerton3162
      @ronfullerton3162 4 роки тому +3

      @@garywiseman5080 The Navy is still "building" Seabees! And their abilities keep getting to be a longer list as the military needs more and more done. My trip out to Port Hueneme was eye opening. Their museum there was well worth visiting. I spent all afternoon the day I was there, and rushed to finish before the museum's closing time. Time we'll spent.

    • @TranscendianIntendor
      @TranscendianIntendor 4 роки тому +2

      @@ronfullerton3162 I read a book about the Seabees that was an excellent story of American patriots who volunteered with knowledge that the younger guys just wouldn't have the skills to do what was obviously necessary if we of the US were to win. They definitely were a brave and eccentric bunch. I say that Great leaders turn to their engineers to solve their most pressing problems. Seabees and the book about engineers working for Churchill "Secret Weapons of WWII" are two of my history favorites. Another favorite is "How to Lose a Battle, France 1940" by Hawke.

    • @ronfullerton3162
      @ronfullerton3162 4 роки тому +3

      @@TranscendianIntendor You would probably love the Seabee museum then. It is a mix of individual stories, Seabee stories, and information of all kinds though out Seabee history. One good individual story was that the Seabees and their equipment came on shore behind the first wave at one of the Pacific islands during World War 2. This was because that island was being invaded only to build an airfield to advance the air coverage further west. The Seabees started building the airfield under fire, but there was one Japanese heavy machine gun nest that was really holding things up. A Marine ran over to a Seabee running a caterpillar with a blade and asked if he would give him sort of an armored shield. The answer was yes, the Marine hopped up behind the blade with a 50 caliber machine gun, and the Seabee steered straight for the nest. The two of them neutralized the nest, and the airfield was built. I don't remember the names of the Marine or the Seabee, but they both received high battle recognition. My full afternoon was not long enough to cover all the wonderful stuff to be taken in there. Hope I get back again before my son in law is transferred.

  • @assessor1276
    @assessor1276 4 роки тому +10

    A well informed and kind treatment of a delicate subject that involves some people who are still alive. Picasso was a genius, but also, a nasty bugger of the first rank.
    Bravo History Guy!

    • @iga279
      @iga279 3 місяці тому

      i guess he just wasn't your typical bourgeois;

  • @kennbiggs9311
    @kennbiggs9311 4 роки тому +5

    For 10 years a print of Picasso’s “The Dream” has hung in my house. I’ve always appreciated the art, but, until today, I didn’t know it’s history. Thank you History Guy!!

  • @russellcannon9194
    @russellcannon9194 4 роки тому +27

    As usual, very well done. I love how you buck the trend of modern historians by providing simple, honest narratives without judgement. Cheers, Russ

  • @jansultan4850
    @jansultan4850 4 роки тому +2

    Thanks for the work you put in, and of course copyrights, and privacy prevail. I get so much joy from your productions. Jan

  • @samiam619
    @samiam619 4 роки тому +96

    I am SO happy to find that I am not the only one to dislike his “art”.

    • @RebeccaCampbell1969
      @RebeccaCampbell1969 4 роки тому +4

      Because you need to be a fool, a Marxist, a... which is what he was.
      Cubism isn’t art, much like a medical magnetic resonance scan is...
      Salvador Dalí was his friend, kind of... read what he said about his fellow Catalan friend
      And also check Pablo’s early art, real art... the Guggenheim museum in NY, at the permanent wing, has some of this work... not bad at all, shame he didn’t explore feelings, he just went for hate like all ideologues.

    • @lakrids-pibe
      @lakrids-pibe 4 роки тому +10

      Holy fuck?! You guys are unironically triggered by 100 year old paintings?
      What else is too much for you? Jazz music? Bauhaus design? Women wearing trousers and smoking cigarettes?
      Picasso must have been on to something.

    • @lakrids-pibe
      @lakrids-pibe 4 роки тому +5

      @Comment from under the rock.
      Well, I do, if they babble about marxism and _kulturkampf_

    • @shawnr771
      @shawnr771 4 роки тому +1

      @@lakrids-pibe I am not triggered by his work. Just never was a fan of his work. Not my style.

    • @gamemeister27
      @gamemeister27 4 роки тому +2

      @@RebeccaCampbell1969 How does being a Marxist make you like a certain art style?

  • @AlbuquerqueImaging
    @AlbuquerqueImaging 4 роки тому +1

    Wow! Thank you! What a truly amazing man Picaso. Truly Iconic. Please more lessons about persons of influence and leadership. Picaso is a hero

  • @eliscanfield3913
    @eliscanfield3913 4 роки тому +32

    Damn. He must've exuded some sort of appeal to attract all these women and metaphorically bind them to him, but I cannot see it. I wonder what happened to the kid who was sent back to the orphanage. Poor child.

    • @blindbrick
      @blindbrick 4 роки тому +3

      Money, fame

    • @perentee77
      @perentee77 4 роки тому +4

      Money, it's like honey to bees for woman.

    • @stewartritchey7602
      @stewartritchey7602 4 роки тому +10

      Many women are attracted to the "bad boy" image, tragically thinking "I can change him" and "Love conquers all".

    • @alainarchambault2331
      @alainarchambault2331 4 роки тому

      @@stewartritchey7602 Exactly why many women remain in abusive relations.

    • @eliscanfield3913
      @eliscanfield3913 4 роки тому +1

      @@perentee77 Not all of us; I married a philosophy student. He now works the phones at a government office.

  • @naomiwendy2234
    @naomiwendy2234 4 роки тому +9

    The cult of personality is a strange thing...
    Despite the man's misogynistic tendencies... I am grateful for the ability to separate the man from his art.

  • @jacktortolani6704
    @jacktortolani6704 4 роки тому +3

    I love ur video's so much, I can't get enough of them!

  • @wearemilesfromnowhere4630
    @wearemilesfromnowhere4630 4 роки тому +114

    After meeting two of his children, I couldn't care less about this prick. Bless you if you have the ability to express genius but not at such an expense to others.

    • @magnificentfailure2390
      @magnificentfailure2390 4 роки тому

      Are his kids really that horrible?

    • @wearemilesfromnowhere4630
      @wearemilesfromnowhere4630 4 роки тому +9

      @@magnificentfailure2390 Not at all. Actually his son was quite soft spoken, almost broody at times. I didn't know who he was at the time as we were sharing stories about our dads. All I knew is that his dad was a painter. Crazy huh? His daughter, was more animated, I did not have a chance to hang with her past a brief hello. This happened in NYC.

    • @QuantumRift
      @QuantumRift 4 роки тому +6

      So true. I never 'got' the art he produced, nor cared. Even an artist can be a perv and 'prick' as you say.

    • @MetalMama-Mimi523
      @MetalMama-Mimi523 4 роки тому +2

      I just commented something similar to what you said. I too do not understand the appeal of this man's artwork especially when learning who this man was as a person. There were a couple of pictures early on in this video where I thought to myself, he looks a little like Hitler, then after watching the entire video I thought to myself that looks weren't the only thing they shared. Terrible person.

  • @Paladin1873
    @Paladin1873 4 роки тому +2

    My wife is an accomplished artist, but you would not know it by seeing her or speaking with her. She is beautiful, articulate, and level-headed. She has spent much of her life trying to destroy the stereotype of the avant-garde artist, but it is an uphill battle.

    • @stewartritchey7602
      @stewartritchey7602 4 роки тому +1

      Same problem with authors.

    • @Paladin1873
      @Paladin1873 4 роки тому +1

      @@stewartritchey7602 She's also an author, and yes, you are right about them.

  • @lawsonj39
    @lawsonj39 4 роки тому +5

    Uniquely among the commenters here, apparently, I love Picasso's work. He never rested, always challenging himself to change it up when he could have coasted on his fame. The range of his images, approaches, and media is endlessly creative, startling, opening wonderful new perspectives. This History Guy episode is disappointing; it doesn't focus on his work but on gossip about his amorous relationships.

    • @gregoryberrycone
      @gregoryberrycone 4 роки тому +1

      agreed, people need to learn to separate the artist from the art.

    • @TheElie79
      @TheElie79 2 роки тому

      @@gregoryberrycone His art literally depicted women he made suffer, you cannot separate the two. Picasso literally said himself his paintings were pages of his lifelong journal. Wake up...

    • @avakiernan7643
      @avakiernan7643 2 роки тому

      @@gregoryberrycone the point of the video isn’t to highlight his art it’s to summarise the artist himself. Basically your comment says “ people shouldn’t be held accountable because of their talent “

  • @williamdicarlo4109
    @williamdicarlo4109 4 роки тому

    Thank you for this video, my mother was an artist and I grew up with the impressionists like they were family. You helped me discover some of my history! Thank you again, sir!

  • @kathleenreyes4345
    @kathleenreyes4345 4 роки тому +4

    Very interesting! Thank you

  • @b_uppy
    @b_uppy 4 роки тому +117

    Should be called Picasso's Many Abuses.

  • @cameltanker1286
    @cameltanker1286 4 роки тому +45

    Thank you Professor for enlightening us on how the peccadilloes of a mean and nasty bastard are ignored because of a supposed talent.

  • @faridsafazadeh1137
    @faridsafazadeh1137 4 роки тому +6

    Like always fascinating. Absolutely the best quality clips I have ever watched on you tube in many years.

  • @SunnnyDay
    @SunnnyDay 4 роки тому +86

    In the 1980's I worked in a home which had a rather large Picasso hung on a wall, I was not impressed. Now, seeing how he lived his life, I have little respect for him as a man.

    • @Paladin1873
      @Paladin1873 4 роки тому +18

      He had the potential to be a great artist, but he squandered his talent. Few of his works impress me because a child with a crayon could have created them. That doesn't stop investors from paying ridiculously obscene prices for them, but their goal is not sensual reward, it is profit on a future sale. The old devil must be laughing in his grave. His victims . . . not so much.

    • @TomLaios
      @TomLaios 4 роки тому

      Very over rated artist.

  • @chrishines6951
    @chrishines6951 4 роки тому

    Keep it up HG. As a recovering history major, having worked in an art museum during school, the comments generated by this segment were quite interesting.

  • @donnalowe9334
    @donnalowe9334 3 місяці тому +1

    Behind closed doors....life happens...wow! Women need never be abused anymore...
    Who gets away with all that? Why? Thank you for the information. Appreciated.

  • @richardmourdock2719
    @richardmourdock2719 4 роки тому +8

    History that deserves to be remembered, will grant you that. Reminds us that being a "jerk" is not just the province of some males of the Twenty-First Century. Picasso was clearly their predecessor. Never cared for his art before, now will especially be disdainful of it.

  • @lynnmitzy1643
    @lynnmitzy1643 4 роки тому +2

    Thank you THG💛

  • @rich8304
    @rich8304 4 роки тому

    What a great channel this is !

  • @Houndini
    @Houndini 4 роки тому +1

    1 more Great One from THG. Thanks

  • @NoelsterSF
    @NoelsterSF 3 роки тому

    Fantastic survey of an extremely talented, complicated artist

  • @robgoodenough5649
    @robgoodenough5649 4 роки тому

    Thank you History Guy for showing us that so much of history is...

  • @AFloridaSon
    @AFloridaSon 4 роки тому +10

    I was never a fan of Picasso. But this is proof that he was a true artist, far more than his paintings ever could. The best known artists, always seem to be a bit of a genius, with a touch of insanity, and filled with eccentricities. But sadly, we never think much about the lives of their muses. This is thought provoking, in *_many_* ways.

  • @kaycox5555
    @kaycox5555 4 роки тому +99

    He was a true and sincere narcissist

    • @bjs301
      @bjs301 4 роки тому +9

      @mad ass That wasn't recognizing one's own at all. Calling him a narcissist is putting it mildly.

    • @PigeonHoledByYT
      @PigeonHoledByYT 4 роки тому +4

      Unfortunately I believe that's part of what makes him so popular, that he is so polarizing. It's much easier to like something, and to spend money on it, when you know that others will hate it (being jealous that you could so easily spend so much on canvas and paint) and that you can look down on them as uncultured peasants.

    • @deadfreightwest5956
      @deadfreightwest5956 4 роки тому +4

      Maybe he was a even a "stable genius"

    • @williamdicarlo4109
      @williamdicarlo4109 4 роки тому

      Much of his work appears to be mindless note taking and experimentation.

    • @rotorheadv8
      @rotorheadv8 4 роки тому +1

      As are many top artists, actors, performers, politicians...

  • @bretnielsen5502
    @bretnielsen5502 2 роки тому

    One of your best! Kudoes from Iowa!

  • @peytonwestlake9737
    @peytonwestlake9737 4 роки тому +2

    Morning, Lance. Love your work.
    How 'bout a series on the uniforms of the U.S. military. (You might start with the Navy. It's the uniform I wore, and I always really like it.) It would be very interesting to learn why certain design features were adopted, and how the uniforms evolved with changes in the demands placed on the forces.
    Thanks.
    Say "hi," to Heidi.
    Have a great day.

  • @dleetr
    @dleetr 4 роки тому

    I'm glad that people aren't as mesmerized by the much lauded art of the 20th century anymore. Thankfully distance from the celebrity culture that helped sell the creators of such mundane work, is helping to diminish that artwork's value in the minds of the now undistracted viewer. Even Picasso himself has been quoted as saying that he knew that his celebrity was based in a fiction, but that he was happy to capitalize on the naivety of the wealthy philistines whom bought his work.

  • @TheNeuel
    @TheNeuel 4 роки тому +2

    Great episode! I hope to see more like these!

  • @painmagnet1
    @painmagnet1 4 роки тому +8

    "Not a very nice fellow" is the most positive thing I can think of to say about him.

  • @michaelkclark6981
    @michaelkclark6981 4 роки тому +2

    This was sad.
    I was not aware of this artist varied background.
    But thanks for your Thoroughness .

  • @rrbee
    @rrbee 4 роки тому +3

    Hope you can do a Champions Day (Detroit, 1936) episode some time. Thanks for the great videos!

  • @mitch19636
    @mitch19636 4 роки тому

    Thank you, Professor...

  • @Quoper1
    @Quoper1 4 роки тому +37

    And I thought Vincent van Gogh was messed up for cutting his ear off.

    • @Paladin1873
      @Paladin1873 4 роки тому +2

      I can think of another appendage some scorned ex-lover would have removed form Picasso if given the opportunity.

    • @mikewysko2268
      @mikewysko2268 4 роки тому +6

      I can forgive Van Gogh as he may of had mental heath issues. As for Picasso he was just another arrogant narcissist.

    • @haroldcook2146
      @haroldcook2146 4 роки тому +9

      Van Gogh could paint ...

    • @Paladin1873
      @Paladin1873 4 роки тому +1

      @@haroldcook2146 Like a six year old.

    • @kevinconrad6156
      @kevinconrad6156 4 роки тому +2

      @@mikewysko2268 As well as neural damage from always sucking on his paint brushes.

  • @MetalMama-Mimi523
    @MetalMama-Mimi523 4 роки тому

    I don't know how I came to be at your channel but I am damn glad I'm here. I love the few videos I have watched so far, and I love your ability in storytelling. It reminds me a bit of Paul Harvey. Thank you for not only being informative but entertaining as well. And while on the video subject of Picasso, although I understand that his ability to create is in his DNA but why do you think he was such a misogynist? I'm sure some will argue that he loved women, but from what I have learned today, they were nothing more than an object to do with what he wished. I never understood the appeal of his artwork and after today, I will never understand the love shown to a man that never seemed to know how to show love in return.

  • @tomjustis7237
    @tomjustis7237 4 роки тому +1

    Speaking as an artist (amature, not professional; I paint and draw only for my own pleasure) I think Picasso was both a highly talented artist and a low life human being. He is not the kind of person I would care to know or with whom I would wish to associate. Still, i think his work was groundbreaking and worthy of admiration. While it may not be politically correct by today's standards, I believe the art should be viewed separate from the artist and his contributions to the advancement of new art forms should be celebrated. Again, the man and the art are two separate things. You can despise the one while still admiring the other.

  • @studuerson2548
    @studuerson2548 Рік тому

    It begs the definition of genius, and what is left out.
    The Picasso Museum in Barcelona is a must see, if one is in town.

  • @shanek6582
    @shanek6582 4 роки тому +1

    Anyone remember that song “Pablo Picasso was never called an asshole”, nope, I’m sure everyone that knew him called him an asshole.

  • @EdwinDover
    @EdwinDover 4 роки тому

    I love your take on controversial people in history! Very fair and matter of fact, some actions that are abhorrent today were quite common during their time. I find the balance of righteous indignation and empathetic hindsight fascinating. If you are willing I would love your take on other figures like Gandhi or Mandela! Thanks so much for the show, and the awesome sweater!

  • @gravelbar
    @gravelbar 4 роки тому

    Very nice!

  • @lukefreeman828
    @lukefreeman828 4 роки тому +1

    Despite a many in the comments, I’ll admit I do like his art... in as much as I appreciate the technical ability. To compare it to a poem, it’s a bit like a sestina, a comparatively dull experience for the viewer, but a great technical exploration of form.

  • @rsr789
    @rsr789 Рік тому

    @TheHistoryGuyChannel The square Apple 'Finder' logo in blue and grey showing two faces combining to make one is actually based on a Picasso of the same design, but oval instead of square... Steve Jobs was a huge Picasso fan (and famously loved his "good artist borrow, great artists steal' quote), so it makes perfect sense that he had his art department make a Picasso variation as the basis for Mac OS's principal feature.

  • @briangarrow448
    @briangarrow448 4 роки тому +1

    I have never met a famous artist. But I personally know a woman who grew up in the same neighborhood and was a friend of with Kurt Cobain.
    After many long conversations with her , I believe that emotional torment and trauma truly effected.
    Kurt's mental health and his music.
    Happy people rarely attain artistic genius.

  • @tonyk1584
    @tonyk1584 4 роки тому +4

    To quote Elvis, "You ain't 'nothin' but a hound 'dawg'"

  • @jimsvideos7201
    @jimsvideos7201 4 роки тому +1

    I like your matching tie and pocket square.

  • @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt
    @MarshOakDojoTimPruitt 4 роки тому +2

    thanks

  • @timan2039
    @timan2039 4 роки тому +1

    "...one of the first successful polio vaccines..." This statement caught my attention so I checked Mr. HG's videos for one on the subject, alas no luck. Mr. HG I think a polio forgotten history story would be a good idea. That illness, polio, had a profound effect on my pre-ww II family by forcing them to remain in 1930's Berlin. History that is remembered and should be.

  • @kenshores9900
    @kenshores9900 4 роки тому

    Very interesting. Good historical story.

  • @emtplacebo
    @emtplacebo 4 роки тому +2

    I was wondering about the history of organ music played at baseball games. Who wrote the tunes? Why were they chosen? When did they first play? I enjoy your videos. Thx for the info

  • @williamschutz4982
    @williamschutz4982 4 роки тому +31

    Dude sounded like a real pos.
    EDIT: He was a pos.

  • @Argos-xb8ek
    @Argos-xb8ek 4 роки тому

    Picasso was cold blooded. It truly was an eye opener really shows you the dichotomy of man in a nutshell.

  • @Bass.Player
    @Bass.Player 4 роки тому +1

    Very good...

  • @roberthoward9500
    @roberthoward9500 4 роки тому +2

    I feel awful for the 13-year-old girl. Adopted she probably felt like she had to agree (or be sent back to the orphanage) when Picasso manipulated her into posing naked and then the girl was tossed aside and kicked back to the orphanage anyway.

    • @2degucitas
      @2degucitas 4 роки тому

      He probably did more than draw and paint her.

  • @joshuafalken5375
    @joshuafalken5375 4 роки тому +4

    Any chance on a video about the history of the polio vaccine? Or the history of the development of radar?

  • @youthmanrecords965
    @youthmanrecords965 4 роки тому +6

    I am spanish and I don’t claim him or his behavior

    • @samiam619
      @samiam619 4 роки тому

      Youthman Production Can you explain his full “crazy” name?

    •  4 роки тому

      Who gives a f*ck about what Spaniards claim? Many of them worship genocidal and liberticidal imperialists as their fatherland's heroes.

  • @tinkmarshino
    @tinkmarshino 4 роки тому +51

    Never really like his paintings and now after hearing this don't really care for the man either..

    • @LordEvan5
      @LordEvan5 4 роки тому +1

      tinkmarshino yeah he seems like a bit of a shit

    • @lindagreen1105
      @lindagreen1105 4 роки тому +1

      A dirty man will do what women allow him to do. I never liked him either.

    • @bitjockey6265
      @bitjockey6265 4 роки тому +2

      Much like my opinion of Frank Lloyd Wright. I had great esteem for him until I visited the FLW Museum in Arizona and saw his work and learned about his "Inner Circle". IMO, an arrogant and over-rated man.

    • @lindagreen1105
      @lindagreen1105 4 роки тому

      @@bitjockey6265 Re are of like mind. I do not care for the look of Frank LLoyd Wright either.

    • @tinkmarshino
      @tinkmarshino 4 роки тому

      @@bitjockey6265 yeah I never much liked his work either.. I guess I am just an old traditionalist .. Thanks for heads up on old F.L.W... I do not have to read about him now..

  • @rogerstolt813
    @rogerstolt813 3 роки тому +1

    Picasso's genius was his ability to convince the world that the ugly garbage he "created" was art

  • @zachgravatt5571
    @zachgravatt5571 4 роки тому

    He was only 5 foot 3 but girls could not resist his stare, Pablo Picasso never got called an asshole.

  • @terrytrostel6965
    @terrytrostel6965 4 роки тому +3

    Hi History Guy

  • @duanemiller5606
    @duanemiller5606 4 роки тому +1

    Never thought to highly of Pablo Picasso or his art.

  • @djdlo
    @djdlo 4 роки тому

    Love your videos, could you make a video on the history of american law enforcement?!

  • @HoopTY303
    @HoopTY303 2 роки тому +1

    If a woman throws herself at your feet do not treat her like a doormat. Pick her up and show her that she is a Goddess.

  • @kristopherbeer5422
    @kristopherbeer5422 3 роки тому

    The better part of your talent must be to not be so arrogant about how good you are!

  • @kcharles8857
    @kcharles8857 4 роки тому

    Not a big fan of Picasso but thoroughly enjoyed this.

  • @EstevanValladares
    @EstevanValladares 4 роки тому +1

    1:01 - Luckly he did not decided to be a lawyer. lol

  • @markwhite1780
    @markwhite1780 4 роки тому +14

    I, for one have never liked cubism nor other works produced by this wrecking ball called a man. I never knew the history that may or may not deserve to be remembered. Nevertheless I appreciate THG for his contribution to the world.

  • @icequeen8531
    @icequeen8531 4 роки тому +4

    With all these women around when did Picasso have time to paint?

    • @MrWATCHthisWAY
      @MrWATCHthisWAY 4 роки тому +1

      Ice Queen - he was quick!

    • @icequeen8531
      @icequeen8531 4 роки тому

      John Paul Lafferty He was a dog as well! Picasso was a sex addict! He really fucked everything that moved!

  • @bethbartlett5692
    @bethbartlett5692 4 роки тому

    *This describes behaviors associated with a defined and varying Personality Disorder known as the Narcissist Personality Disorder,* and that is best understood through a reading of the same by the DSM VI, a Diagnostic Manual for Physicians, Psychiatrists, Psychologists, Nurses, and Therapists, when diagnosing patients.
    The Narcissist Personality Disorder, whether Overt or Covert, (more information would be required) to determine.
    There are varying arguments over the subject's defining, as it relates to the Sociopath and Psychopath, however it is best applied as the core defining of the personality behavioral trait and from there the individual's particular actions can be further defined.
    It is the Clinical, Overt, Narcissist Personality Disorder/NPD, that both Harvard and Yale have diagnosed describing D Trump. A diagnosis best reached through observing social interactions, listening to subject in their communications, family interviews, and when the individual display the common trait factors associated with the label defining of NPD:
    Grandiosity of self, void of Empathy, Sympathy, Emotions of Care, Love, Regret, Guilt, and Personal Respinsibility and Responsibilities.
    These individuals run a variance from simple Selfish to Blatant Clinical and with obvious Sadistic Pleasures.
    Often described as so void of feelings that only when you stick them with a needle do you get an "authentic feeling".
    Descriptions of NPD most often include describing them as: Vamps, as they feed from *"energies that result from their drama actions expressed in reactions by their subject Victim(s).*
    NPD is a result of both Genetic Traits and their Environmental experiences. At present, is can only be treated with potential success when there is intervention during early years, the earlier the better, once they reach 12 years -> it becomes less optimistic and most experts indicate that past the age 18 it is hopeless.
    I disagree with this point, thought a most expensive and long-term effort. It would require a minimum of 3 years of intensive focused effort in an inpatient setting using Adult Behavior Modification, and a practice some cal Brainwashing, a practice actually developed and studied in the 1950's by the CIA and their using the techniques with a variety of subjects from volunteers and inmates. Arguably a decision that itself requires Empathy to determine the value of the potential outcome.
    The greater concernbin 2020 is the true reality that the NPD, even though displaying consistent behaviors, on a world stage, in the most Overt sense, is also presenting to the Experts, Researchers, Students, and Interested Observers, a separate related subject of vast numbers of persons either not recognizing the behaviors as concerning or in spite of, and further *"endorsing and/or allowing" an extreme Overt NPD the role that one would recognize as Important to the Wellbeing, Safety, and Direction, of a Country, its Neighbors, and the World.*
    For additional information on the subject search with Google and UA-cam:
    DSM VI
    Dr Sam Vaknin
    Richard Gannon
    The Cluster B Personality Disorders
    Note: Every Abuser is an Narcissist Personality Disorder of varying degree.
    All Child Abusers are NPD, although not all NPD's are Child Abusers.
    The variables of types of Abuse: Child, Adult, Sexual, Physical, Emotional, Spiritual are all important, yet the feed of energy, aka "Narcissist Supply" seem to all funnel down through the 1 variable most serious and key subject to overcoming for the Victim/Patient is Emotional Abuse, as it is the force that can linger indefinitely and must be understood by the Therapist and Patient to successful freeing of the "Victim Status"
    This is where indifference has a most positive application.
    *Lastly, the NPD is a dark, toxic, energy, and must be understood in a educated sense to best treat individual and for teaching future experts. They have the potential for serious and dangerous actions.*
    *Do not out an NPD nor accuse them of their NPD status.* Do not share personal private points or "Hopes and Dreams" with them. They will make every effort to control and to gain "Narcissist Supply" using this information.
    They are famous for "Gaslighting" Victims and foes using personal information and do so quite successfully.
    Seek professional advice and/or counseling through a Therapist whom specializes in treating NPD Victims.
    The only way to beat a Narcissist is to "Not Play with Them", do not "React to their Baits", separate self from involvement with them, if they are a parent, boss/employer, partner: quietly set about a plan to separate from the situation and to protect self in future One must "Set Boundaries" and be consistent.
    Then, it is a true opportunity to work on self with the most positive of facts, an Absolute of the Universe (few if any other absolutes can be found in life) *"The Universal Law of Attraction" which includes the "Absolute": All thoughts have a vibrational frequency and flow throughout the Universe, these meet and receive "like energy vibrations" andvretirn resulting in what we know as "Our Reality".*
    -Quantum Physics
    (This is "the Mustard Seed" Jesus taught some 2000 years before the law was discovered by Quantum Physics) I leave the subject to the Reader, as now You have been informed with what I consider the most valuable piece of knowledge any of us can realize and have opportunity to Master. With this, we can continue our Life Journey as it was intended for us to experrience, with our "Creating, using our Thoughts"
    ... this a Fact, and is one with "History that is Worth Remembering"
    Best wellbeing to all ...

  • @jp-um2fr
    @jp-um2fr 4 роки тому

    U.K. I was hoping that the comments were derogatory. Many of Turners painting were considered unrealistic due to his attempts to add 'feeling' in them. I love 'The Last Voyage Of The Fighting Temeraire' for many reasons. He wanted a setting sun, it seemed right although at the time it wasn't like that. It's impressionism but for most people acceptable or even very special. Picasso's autograph was worth a lot. On the beach a woman sent her young child with a pen and paper to ask Picasso for his autograph, he wrote one, on the childs back. That man desperately needed 'The Green Pineapple Treatment'. I think his later work was a waste of paint.

  • @redram5150
    @redram5150 4 роки тому +1

    Dalì, his tumultuous career, and shrew wife, Gala would make a great episode

  • @bukkaneer3774
    @bukkaneer3774 4 роки тому +1

    Hello. I have been following you for awhile now. Thank you for your channel . I find it interesting and informative. snippets 10 - 15 minutes long, brilliant! you have found the millennials attention span! You ask for suggestions about topics, mine is, I woul dlike to know more about the British/American invasion of Russia post WWI, Great channel and I hope you like my idea,
    Ron S.

  • @thesportofpeace2483
    @thesportofpeace2483 4 роки тому

    Maybe don't pan with the special effect editing thing when it's a painting. In a painting, the composition is meant to be a certain way. I think it's a cool effect when it supplies movement to a still. It can be disturbing in subtle and other ways too. I hope this is good critique. I love every episode, and when I grow up I will be a Patreon supporter.

  • @CDRaff
    @CDRaff 4 роки тому +1

    I love all the people in the comments talking about how Picasso's work evoked emotions of disgust, hate, confusion, and apathy; but it isn't "art".

  • @davidblanco4687
    @davidblanco4687 4 роки тому +2

    I know this is unrelated, but considering the current popularity around “The Irishman”, is there any chance that a video will be made focusing on Jimmy Hoffa?! After watching it and then reading up on his life, I think it would be a very interesting life to examine as well as his effects on both the 20th and 21st centuries!

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  4 роки тому +3

      David Blanco we considered it back in October before the movie was released. In the end, the topic proved both too expansive and too well-known for our format. We might revisit that at some point. For the short answer, people who have heavily studied the Hoffa story give little credence to the story told in The Irishman.

    • @robertbeirne9813
      @robertbeirne9813 4 роки тому

      The History Guy: History Deserves to Be Remembered The Irishman was just a huge payday for Scorsese, and his pals. Very little of this movie had anything to do with history.

  • @IppiopaidFEEDBACK
    @IppiopaidFEEDBACK 4 роки тому +3

    UA-cam at its finest!

  • @Exedus20
    @Exedus20 4 роки тому

    Though he was only 5 foot 2 girls could not resist his stare. Subsequently Pablo Picasso was never called an asshole.

  • @evillyn7895
    @evillyn7895 4 роки тому +3

    Well, I will never look at Picasso the same way.

  • @juiceboxhero3576
    @juiceboxhero3576 4 роки тому

    Do an episode on the history of the peanut butter and jelly sandwich and why its every kids favorite sandwich. When did it start? Why grape jelly?

  • @bumpsproductions7064
    @bumpsproductions7064 3 роки тому

    I would like to see a story on the tv show “Emergency “. It had a tremendous impact on the growth of EMTs in the country. Also if you want a Seabee hard hat used in Iraq drop me a line.

  • @kellyganson7011
    @kellyganson7011 4 роки тому

    That was awesome! Now how about Gustav Klimt or Alphonse Mucha?

  • @sweetearthfarm
    @sweetearthfarm 4 роки тому +58

    Sounds like an ass that preyed on weak and vulnerable women. I'm also not impressed by most of his art. But information is always good. Thanks for covering the topic.

    • @SwampGas703
      @SwampGas703 4 роки тому +3

      they also could have been psycho bitch gold diggers

    • @dewiz9596
      @dewiz9596 4 роки тому +3

      Likewise. He obviously knew how to draw and paint. . . but “sold out” with his later stuff. “The Emperor’s New Clothes came from Picasso’s Brush”.

    • @chocolatefrenzieya
      @chocolatefrenzieya 4 роки тому

      Agreed.

    •  4 роки тому +1

      _"Sounds like an ass that preyed on weak and vulnerable women."_
      - Did he perhaps eat them?

  • @Accu53Mation
    @Accu53Mation 4 роки тому +1

    Always prefer reality painters. Landscapes. Keep my library walls framed with Edward Gay, Thomas Cole, Asher Durand, and MJ Walters. It's important for an individual to be knowledgeable and precise on local history where one resides.

  • @humanistcollector5980
    @humanistcollector5980 7 місяців тому

    11:04 His last partner alive, François Gilot, died on 6th june 2023, at 101.

  • @jeanette8943
    @jeanette8943 4 роки тому +5

    Wait, "Olivia returned the child to the orphanage" ? The child gets abused then abandoned? I am actually more curious about what happened to the rest of her life!

  • @davecc0000
    @davecc0000 4 роки тому

    An episode, please, on Nicola Tesla. And why it took a car brand name to bring his memory (barely) into the public’s awareness. Why is his memory so tenuous?

  • @michaelwalton4017
    @michaelwalton4017 4 роки тому +4

    Pablo Diego Jose Francesco de Paula Nepoaceno Maria de la Remedios Cipeian de la Santisma Martyr Patricio Clito Ruiz y Picasso!
    I hope I didn't leave anything out!🙄

    •  4 роки тому

      Felipe Juan Pablo Alfonso de Todos los Santos Bourbon y Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg

  • @gregiles908
    @gregiles908 11 місяців тому

    "Piccassole as I called him" : Peter Cook

  • @goodun2974
    @goodun2974 4 роки тому +1

    I'm not really a fan of Picasso's later work ---- definitely not a fan of the man himself ---- but he was good for a few notable quotes: "Art is the broom with which we sweep away the dust of everyday life"*. Whatever one thinks of the man, if you are ever in Barcelona, the Picasso museum is a must-see; I found much of his early work to be stunning, and completely at odds with what we generally think of as "Picasso". (I had a similar reaction when visiting the Gaudi museum in Barcelona). And then there is "Guernica", which does move me. Another museum of more modern art in Barcelona had a painting that was sort of a cross between Guernica and a Hieronymus Bosch painting, or Dante's 7 levels of hell. It was both magnificent and terrifying.
    * Hendrix may have referenced this in "The Wind Cries Mary" : " a broom is drearily sweeping/up the broken pieces of yesterday's life/ somewhere a queen is weeping/ somewhere a king has no wife..."

  • @clemmonswest262
    @clemmonswest262 4 роки тому

    You should totally do a video about Donald crowhurst

  • @mickeymet6973
    @mickeymet6973 4 роки тому

    As always, I enjoy The History Guy, but I had one observation that I think should be corrected in your future offerings. . . You mentioned a few times in this episode, that 'this or that' happened "this year." You may want to refrain from using that term, unless you modify it to something like "it happened this year, 2020." Otherwise, 4 years from now someone hearing, "this year" might make the error in assuming 2024. Make sense?

  • @bradbutcher3984
    @bradbutcher3984 4 роки тому +17

    I only thought his art was shit, now I know he was also

  • @user-ss2ly1ir6j
    @user-ss2ly1ir6j 4 роки тому

    That Picasso guy sounds exactly like me, except I can only paint with a roller.

  • @Newzchspy
    @Newzchspy 4 роки тому +52

    Goddesses and doormats??? Pfft, his hubris is of a Don Juan, but his reality was of an abusive, depressive loner . He preyed upon weak women. Anyone see irony in many of the woman he was with committed suicide.?

    •  4 роки тому +1

      "He preyed upon weak women." Did he perhaps eat them?

    • @TheChugg11
      @TheChugg11 4 роки тому

      Newzchspy
      I thought he said: ‘novices’. That sentence makes more sense now!

    • @2degucitas
      @2degucitas 4 роки тому

      Irony? No. Tragedy.

  • @jansultan4850
    @jansultan4850 4 роки тому +2

    would have been interesting to flash on a few of the pieces of art referred to in the narrative. otherwise an interesting retro on a talented and unapologetic narcissist.

    • @TheHistoryGuyChannel
      @TheHistoryGuyChannel  4 роки тому +2

      We did as much as they were available. Anything painted after 1924 was not yet in the Public Domain.

  • @Jdflana1
    @Jdflana1 4 роки тому +2

    If you had met that “ most despicable of creatures “ you would be a a little less effusive in your praise.