Blue Period of Great Oil Painter-Picasso - Oil Paintings Reproduction
AnÂ*Oil painting shows blue mood? Picasso's Blue Period (1901–1904) consists of somber paintings rendered in shades of blue and blue-green, only occasionally warmed by other colors. This period's <a href="http://www.couponcatch.net/ "><strong>coupon savings </strong></a> starting point is uncertain; it may have begun in Spain in the spring of 1901, or in Paris in the second half of the year. ManyÂ* oil paintings of gaunt mothers with children date from this period. In his austere use of color and sometimes doleful <a href="http://www.couponcatch.net/ "><strong>discount codes </strong></a> subject matter—prostitutes and beggars are frequent subjects—Picasso was influenced by a trip through Spain and by the suicide of his friend Carlos Casagemas. Starting in autumn of 1901 <a href="http://www.couponcatch.net/ "><strong>free online coupons </strong></a> he painted several posthumous portraits of Casagemas, culminating in the gloomy allegorical paintingÂ*La Vie (1903),now in the Cleveland Museum of Art(Oil painting art) The same mood pervades the well-known etchingÂ*The Frugal Repast (1904),which depicts a blind man and a sighted woman, both emaciated, seated at a nearly bare table. Blindness is a recurrent theme in Picasso's works of this period, also represented inÂ*The Blindman's Meal (1903, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and in the portrait ofÂ*Celestina (1903). Other works includeÂ*Portrait <a href="http://ncpjy.zgts.gov.cn/view.php?id=170"><strong>HUGO BOSS SUNGLASSES UNI###### BLACK BO 807LF 0347S Reviews|Best Watches</strong></a> of Soler andÂ*Portrait of Suzanne Bloch.
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