يحاول ذهب - حر
Art review An awe-inspiring celebration of a raw, raging genius
September 16, 2025
|The Guardian
The Acrobat sums up the effect Pablo Picasso had on art in his 91 years on Earth.
-

In this 1930 painting, lent by the Musée Picasso in Paris, a body with no defined gender contorts into an insoluble puzzle, a leg sprouting above its anus, the head, eyes closed, bulging where genitals might be, the other leg standing on the ground balanced by an arm whose hand functions as a foot while the other arm, fist clenched, bends like a tail. In just this way, Picasso turned art inside out and upside down, twisted it unrecognisably yet made it all the more compelling, human and passionate.
Born into a Europe of realistic sculptures and perspective pictures, he blew up those conventions, put them back together, then smashed them again and a few times more. It's hard not to be awed by his achievements, his creative energy, the scale of his artistic breakthroughs, though Tate Modern tries its best.
Theatre Picasso starts with a clearing of the throat and references to gender and artistic borrowing. But those concerns go nowhere, vanishing in what becomes almost despite itself-a riotous celebration of his genius.
It breaks up Picasso as he broke up what he saw. There is no chronology or historical context.
A piece of film shot by Man Ray of Picasso in a wig as Carmen - filmed just after he had painted Guernica - is followed by a selection of much later "obscene" images.
هذه القصة من طبعة September 16, 2025 من The Guardian.
اشترك في Magzter GOLD للوصول إلى آلاف القصص المتميزة المنسقة، وأكثر من 9000 مجلة وصحيفة.
هل أنت مشترك بالفعل؟ تسجيل الدخول
المزيد من القصص من The Guardian
The Guardian
Stand-in Steve gets mauling from MPs over Mandy
Just what has Stephen Doughty done to upset Keir Starmer? Are there no limits to the prime minister’s contempt?
2 mins
September 17, 2025
The Guardian
Seville suggests 9.6sec in sight but says Bolt is incomparable
On Sunday night, Oblique Seville became the first Jamaican to win the men’s 100m world title since Usain Bolt. But it turns out the 24-year-old’s mind is just as quick as his leg speed.
2 mins
September 17, 2025
The Guardian
Dispute takes a fresh twist as former staff sue new league
A group of 18 former employees of the British Basketball League (BBL) are taking legal action against the competition that replaced it, Super League Basketball, in the latest development in the extraordinary civil war that has engulfed the sport.
1 mins
September 17, 2025
The Guardian
Trump fans the flames of division, says Khan
Donald Trump arrived in the UK last night to a barrage of criticism from Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London, who has accused the US president of doing more than anyone else to encourage the intolerant far right across the globe.
1 mins
September 17, 2025
The Guardian
Palace make Millwall pay for Mateta injury taunts
Any Crystal Palace supporters looking for good omens will know that beating Millwall is a good place to start.
2 mins
September 17, 2025
The Guardian
Deportation halted in blow to 'one in, one out'
An Eritrean man had his deportation to France under Labour's “one in, one out” scheme halted at the 11th hour after he won a high court challenge last night.
1 min
September 17, 2025
The Guardian
JLR production freeze extended after data hack
Jaguar Land Rover has extended its shutdown on car production, as Britain’s biggest carmaker grapples with the aftermath of a cyber-attack.
1 min
September 17, 2025
The Guardian
Appreciation Indecently handsome A-lister who seduced Hollywood
As the 1960s turned into the 1970s, it wasn't cool for star actors to be good-looking.
1 mins
September 17, 2025
The Guardian
'You just keep on thinking about her'
Family speaks of loss
2 mins
September 17, 2025
The Guardian
'From death to death'
Nowhere is safe for the displaced
3 mins
September 17, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size