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The Visual Grammar of Pablo Picasso

by Enrique Mallen (Author)
©2003 Monographs XVI, 346 Pages

Summary

Pablo Picasso’s continued search for the essential features of perceived objects and his natural abidance to the general principles regulating artistic creation determined his intuitive analysis of the various stages of vision. His exploration of pictorial language is reflected in the well-established periods in the development of Cubism. Progressively, objects were analyzed first by their image (or retinal) and surface (or external) features as viewed from particular observer-oriented viewpoints during the Pre-Cubist and Cézannian Cubist stages; then by viewer-independent, structural features during Analytic Cubism; and finally by categorial features during Synthetic Cubism. This final re-evaluation allowed the artist to treat pictorial language as truly arbitrary, leading to metaphorical correlations between objects that went beyond what was actually depicted on the surface of the canvas.

Details

Pages
XVI, 346
Year
2003
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820456928
Language
English
Keywords
Semiotics /France Cubism /France Visual perception Art /France Picasso, Pablo
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Oxford, Wien, 2003. XVI, 346 pp., 318 fig.

Biographical notes

Enrique Mallen (Author)

The Author: Enrique Mallen earned his doctorate at Cornell University in 1989. He is currently Associate Professor of Hispanic Studies at Texas A & M University in College Station. His publications include Con/figuración Sintáctica: Poesía del Des/lenguaje; The Embodiment of the Pictorial Sign: Pablo Picasso’s Early Cubism; Metaphor and Cognition in Pablo Picasso’s Synthetic Cubism; and A Minimalist Approach to Picasso’s Visual Grammar: Les Demoiselles d’Avignon.

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Title: The Visual Grammar of Pablo Picasso