Pablo Picasso citations
Page 4

Pablo Ruiz Picasso, né à Malaga le 25 octobre 1881 et mort le 8 avril 1973 à Mougins , est un peintre, dessinateur et sculpteur espagnol ayant passé l'essentiel de sa vie en France.

Artiste utilisant tous les supports pour son travail, il est considéré comme le fondateur du cubisme avec Georges Braque et un compagnon d'art du surréalisme. Il est l'un des plus importants artistes du XXe siècle, tant par ses apports techniques et formels que par ses prises de positions politiques. Il a produit près de 50 000 œuvres dont 1 885 tableaux, 1 228 sculptures, 2 880 céramiques, 7 089 dessins, 342 tapisseries, 150 carnets de croquis et 30 000 estampes .

✵ 25. octobre 1881 – 8. avril 1973
Pablo Picasso photo
Pablo Picasso: 135   citations 0   J'aime

Pablo Picasso citations célèbres

“On met très longtemps à devenir jeune.”

Quotes, 1950's

Pablo Picasso: Citations en anglais

“It is my misfortune - and probably my delight - to use things as my passions tell me. What a miserable fate for a painter who adores blondes to have to stop himself putting them into a picture because they don't go with the basket of fruit!”

Herschel Browning Chip (1968, p. 267).
(another and longer version:) What a sad fate for a painter who loves blondes, but who refrains from putting them in his picture because they don’t go with the basket of fruit! What misery for a painter who hates apples to be obliged to use them all the time because they go with the cloth! I put everything I love in my paintings. So much the worse for the things, they have only to arrange themselves with one another
Richard Friendenthal (1963, p. 256).
1930s, "Conversations avec Picasso," 1934–35

“Their forms had no more influence on me than they did on Matisse. Or Derain. But for them, the masks were sculptures like all others. When Matisse showed me his first African head, he spoke to me of Egyptian art.”

Andre Malraux cites Picasso in: Anatoliĭ Podoksik, ‎Marina Aleksandrovna Bessonova, ‎Pablo Picasso (1989), Picasso: The Artists Work in Soviet Museums. p. 13.
Picasso talking about his discovery of African art.
Attributed from posthumous publications

“When there's anything to steal, I steal”

Quoted in: Thought. Vol. 17 (1965). p. 154.
The magazine further commented:
Picasso's remark — "When there's anything to steal, I steal" — was fair warning to the competition. In modern art he has been, for years, the cock-of- the-walk, (The broody hens, one supposes, are also part of that picture.) But the book is valuable, primarily, for Picasso's observations about his own work and the work of others.
1960s

“You mustn't alway believe what I say", he once told me. "Questions tempt you to tell lies, particularly when there is no answer.”

From Picasso, His Life and Work, Sir Roland Penrose, (1981), p. 413
Attributed from posthumous publications

“The glories, trumpets, palms… and low reliefs,… all that makes a monument.”

Les gloires, les trompettes, les palmes... et les bas-reliefs,... tout cela fait un monument.
Picasso (1952). Quoted in: Michael D. Garval (2004), "A Dream of Stone": Fame, Vision, and Monumentality in Nineteenth-century French Literary Culture. p. 226.
Picasso commented on the matter of the monument destruction in Paris.
Quotes, 1950's

“People who try to explain pictures are usually barking up the wrong tree.”

Quoted in Picasso on Art (1988), ed. Dore Ashton.
Attributed from posthumous publications

“On August 2, 1914, I took Braque and Derain to the Gare d'Avignon [drafted as a soldier for World war 1. ] I never saw them again [not literally a fact, but the close relation between Picasso and Braque ended].”

Quote in My Galleries and Painters, Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler, New York Viking Press, 1971, p. 46
Picasso in a talk c. 1955, with Daniel-Henry Kahnweiler
Quotes, 1950's

“In the old days pictures went forward toward completion by stages. Every day brought something new. A picture used to be a sum of additions. In my case a picture is a sum of destructions. I do a picture — then I destroy it. In the end though, nothing is lost: the red I took away from one place turns up somewhere else”

Herschel Browning Chip (1968, p. 267)
Other translation:
Formerly pictures used to move towards completion in progressive stages. Each day would bring something new. A picture was a sum of additions. With me, picture is a sum of destructions. I do a picture, then I destroy it. But in the long run nothing is lost; the red that I took away from one place turns up somewhere else.
Richard Friedenthal (1968, p. 256); Also quoted in: John Bowker (1988), Is anybody out there?: religions and belief in God in the contemporary world. p. 57.
1930s, "Conversations avec Picasso," 1934–35

“I was thinking about Casagemas's death that started me painting in blue.”

Quoted in Pierre Daix, La Vie de Peintre de Pablo Picasso, Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1977.
Picasso explained his friend Pierre Daix (around 1965), why he started painting in blue early around 1905. Picasso had made a portrait of Carles Casagemas in 1899.
1970s
Original: C’est en passant que Casagemas était mort que je me suis mis à piendre en bleu

“Drink to me. Drink to my health. You know I can't drink any more.”

Quoted in: Scott Slater, ‎Alec Solomita (1980), Exits: stories of dying moments & parting words. p. 8.
Slater & Solomita (1980) explained:
"It was a spirited dinner and Picasso a cheerful, genial host. After the meal, while pouring wine into a friend's glass, Picasso said, Drink to me. Drink to my health. You know I can't drink any more. A little later, about 11:30 P.M., he left his guests, saying, And now I must go back to work. He was up painting until 3:00 A.M. That morning Picasso woke at 11:30, unable to move. By 11:40 he was dead..".
1970s

Auteurs similaires

Salvador Dalí photo
Salvador Dalí 44
peintre, sculpteur, graveur, scénariste et écrivain catalan
Camilo José Cela photo
Camilo José Cela 5
écrivain espagnol
Khalil Gibran photo
Khalil Gibran 13
poète et peintre libanais
Mario Vargas Llosa photo
Mario Vargas Llosa 14
écrivain péruvien et espagnol, auteur de romans et d'essais…
Jean Cocteau photo
Jean Cocteau 31
écrivain, peintre et réalisateur français
Guillaume Apollinaire photo
Guillaume Apollinaire 33
poète français
Albert Camus photo
Albert Camus 92
écrivain et journaliste français
Ernest Hemingway photo
Ernest Hemingway 29
écrivain, journaliste et correspondant de guerre américain
Winston Churchill photo
Winston Churchill 23
homme d'État britannique
Aude de Kerros photo
Aude de Kerros 6
peintre française