“Human. Inhuman. Superhuman. Picasso was all of these at once—and in excess,” writes Paul Desalmand in the foreword to his selection. I have sought to document the verbatim words of a genius who became the painter-historiographer of the entire artistic history of the West. Not as a system, but as a living chronicle of the twentieth century, reflecting the cultures, spiritualities, and fractures of humanity. This voice, fragmentary and contradictory, continues to challenge our era, our judgments, and our own unexamined assumptions.
Patrick Frémeaux
Here is an unclassifiable book. First compiled by Paul Desalmand in 1996, Picasso by Picasso brings together the master's words as reported by those closest to him—his companions, dealers, friends, and enemies. Thirty years later, Patrick Frémeaux, a publisher deeply committed to preserving the sound and visual memory of the twentieth century, returns to the keyboard to offer an expanded edition, enriched by a lifetime of collecting, exhibitions, encounters, aesthetic and philosophical reflection, and publishing in History and the Human Sciences.
This collection of quotations, anecdotes, and confidences forms a self-portrait in fragments: that of a painter who dared everything, transformed everything, and overturned everything. Through this annotated edition, readers journey between the words of the intellectual Picasso and the echoes they generate in art history, philosophy, politics, ethics, and the intimate sphere.
Stéphanie Acquette
546 Pages