Loving Picasso: The Private Journal of Fernande Olivier by Fernande Olivier, Michael Raeburn, Christine D. Baker

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  • ISBN: 0810942518
  • Publisher: HNA Books
  • Pub. Date: May 2001
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Comments from the Seller: Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.A. 2001 NEW Book, perfect condition. Text & cover completely pristine, free of any wear. FREE TRACKING within the US, and email notice when shipped. Normally, books are shipped twice a day, with afternoon USPS pickup, or next morning drop-off at the Post Office. We package on Sunday for shipment first thing Monday morning. Your satisfaction guaranteed. We have multiple copies of most books. Email inquiries are welcomed. Thanks for reading all of our boilerplate.

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Synopsis

Fernande Olivier was the first real love in the life of Pablo Picasso, and the years she spent with the great artist, 1904 to 1912, coincide with the period of some of his most revolutionary work. Here, in her compelling and revelatory journal, published for the first time in English, Olivier vividly depicts her turbulent relationship with Picasso and, in her letters to Gertrude Stein, Alice B. Toklas, and Guillaume Apollinaire, sheds new light on the Parisian art scene of the early 20th century.

Loving Picasso brings Olivier's memoirs to life with archival photographs, reproductions of her own artwork, paintings for which she modeled before she met Picasso, and a selection of superb portraits of her by Picasso himself. A foreword and notes by Picasso scholar Marilyn McCully set the journal and letters in context, and an epilogue by distinguished art historian and Picasso biographer John Richardson tells the story of Olivier's life after her final breakup with Picasso.

Author Biography: Marilyn McCully has published many books and articles on Picasso, and has organized exhibitions of the artist's work, most recently "Picasso: Painter and Sculptor in Clay" at the Royal Academy of Arts, London, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. She lives in London.

John Richardson is a noted authority on Picasso's life and work. He is currently working on the third volume of his acclaimed biography of the artist, A Life of Picasso. He lives in New York City.

Publishers Weekly

Model and sometime diction teacher Olivier (1881-1966) lived with Picasso for nine years. Their passionate and contentious relationship, begun during his Blue and Rose periods, deteriorated and finally imploded as cubism built up steam. In the late 1920s, after fending for herself for nearly 20 years, the free-spirited and straight-talking Olivier (n e Am lie Lang) wrote an unsparing, crackling memoir of their high bohemian lives together, serializing it in Le Soir in 1930 and provoking Picasso's fury. It is published here for the first time in English, interspersed among Olivier's copious journal entries, and further supplemented with letters, and with annotations, notes and 82 illustrations (10 in color) selected by Marilyn McCully (Picasso: Painter and Sculptor in Clay). Beginning with journal entries chronicling her whim-based "downfall" and marriage to an abuser at 18, her life as a model in and around the Ecole des Beaux Arts and further venturings, Olivier finally meets (on page 137) "the Spanish painter who lives in our building" ("I don't find him particularly attractive"), who turns out to be Picasso and they immediately take up with each other. Olivier's prosaic proto-postfeminism yields a page-turning perspective on a woman who vigilantly maintained her own identity, even as it was formed in relation to men, including friends from Apollinaire to Max Jacob, and by other famous friends like Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas. In an epilogue, distinguished Picasso biographer John Richardson convincingly speculates that this memoir, published complete in French in 1933 but entrusted to Stein for American publication earlier, may have inspired The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas. With its charming flaws (some, like reflexive anti-Semitism, less so) and guileless presentation, it's easy to see why. (May) Forecast: Attractively produced and carefully edited, this book will be a serious beach read for the art set and beyond, and its plethora of intrigue will draw in those who flip through it on a display table. Expect sales on the order of The Diary of Frieda Kahlo. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

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Loving Picasso: The Private Journal of Fernande Olivierby Anonymous

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05/23/2002: Loving Picasso caputures one woman's unique experiences as she ventures into adulthood. The book is soley composed of Fernande Olivier's journel entries and letters but it reads easily like a compelling novel. Even at a young age Fernande's writing is witty and capitivating. The story begins with her life as an unwanted child and her dreadful entanglements with the men she encounters. She heroicly escapes to freedom and finds a home in Paris while supporting herself as artist's model. Through modeling she is introduced to the art world and the radical painter, Pablo Picasso. Fernande becomes Picasso first true love and a continous inspiration during the time when Picasso was defining cubism and creating some of his most memorable pieces. I would reccomend this book to anyone who is intersted in art history or is simplying looking for a romatic story of two great lovers. I gained a new apprecation of the arts as well as a newfound understaning of the time period(the early 1900's)and the struggle artists had to endure. After reading Loving Picasso I will never look at a Picasso painting the same and will always wonder if the piece was inspired or protrays Fernande Olivier.

Loving Picasso: The Private Journal of Fernande Olivierby Anonymous

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11/09/2001: A Challenging Life! Loving Picasso is a book that will touch your heart, and my moisten your eyes. When we visit a museum and see wonderful paintings of striking women, seldom do we think about the conditions under which the art was created. Did the artists and the model have a relationship? If so, what was it? Did they have enough to eat while the work was done? Were they considerate of one another? Was the studio warm or cold? What was the model thinking about as she posed? How had the woman come to model? And so on. I will never look at another painting or sculpture again of a human model without being filled with such questions, as a result of reaching about the life of Fernande Olivier from her private journal, letters, and memoir as presented in Loving Picasso. This beautiful, charming woman lived an extremely difficult life. It was so challenging that few could have emerged from such awful circumstances without being distorted in mind and personality. Yet, Ms. Olivier seems to have avoided both, and been a light in the life of her many male admirers, female friends, and an inspiration to Picasso in his most innovative years. From the book?s title, you will think that the material is mostly about the years when Ms. Olivier and Picasso lived together, but that?s only about half the book. The book is really an autobiography through the time when the two split up for the final time in 1912. Readers will be rewarded with many intriguing views of the lives of ?starving? artists in Paris, the many distinguished friends of Picasso and Ms. Olivier, and how Picasso changed as he went from an unknown to one of the recognized leaders of avant-garde art along with Matisse. Having read about Picasso?s troubled relationships with other women, I was surprised to see that his relationship with Ms. Olivier was one of the most pleasant and productive connections he had in his life. Certainly, he often chose her as a model for his work, and we will always see her as the young person she was then. Many other details in here will either surprise or shock you about Picasso, and expand your understanding of his creative methods and personality. One of the most charming parts of the book can be found in the many images of places where she lived, the people she knew, the paintings and sculptures for which she was the model, and her own drawings. For those who have enjoyed Gertrude Stein?s, The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, you will probably be interested to know that Ms. Olivier?s writing is considered to be a more accurate and complete version of many of the same events. In fact, there is an interesting view of Ms. Stein?s apparent efforts to keep Ms. Olivier?s writing away from an American audience to preserve the market for Ms. Stein?s own writing on this subject. After you finish this rewarding memoir of a most unique person, I suggest that you think about what the purpose of life is. That?s a question with which Ms. Olivier had trouble coming to grips. Follow your purpose! Donald Mitchell, co-author of The 2,000 Percent Solution and The Irresistible Growth Enterprise