The Man And His Art - Picasso In His Own Words:
The Grand Exhibition Tour
A portrait of my son, Claude, with his horse Horsey who died from malnutrition only hours after I finished the painting. Claude took all the money I gave him for horse-food and used it to buy a baseball bat to club pigeons. Such a fine little Marxist. | |||||||
What if children had a penis on their heads? No-one ever contemplated this question. Degas claims he did, but what does that impressionist ass know. I call this one "Flapping Arms Beneath A Strange Penis". The two round objects are underdeveloped breasts (no nipples, see); I also toyed briefly with the idea of every person on Earth having breasts. The chair is a director's chair – Richard Attenborough's chair, to be exact. His son served as the model. We had to get permission for him to skip a day in the London School For Very Retarded Kids. |
"Horsey Doesn't Like Tsunami". Horsey in his better days. A portrait of him trying to get into a house and safety from a giant oncoming wave. However, my son Claude had left a key in the lock just to annoy Horsey. He had to sit out the tsunami on the beach which had us all in stitches, quite frankly. Oh, how we laughed… |
"Tired Breasts Of The Proletariat". After a hard day's work, Soviet peasants enjoy life as only Communism can provide. Notice the muscles on that man-boy's arms. (I know I have…) This was only months before I started my renowned crappy breasts phase: I was just getting warmed up here. |
"What Objects Do You See On This Picture? The Answer Is On Page 87". |
A magazine editor asked me if he could use this gem as a picture-puzzle. I spat in his face. He then offered me $250 and a puzzle it was, with this new name. The original title was "The Conceptual Rituals Of A Multitude Of Screaming Meanies". |
My daughter Paloma, after her third eye-surgery. Note how she has 6 fingers on one hand, just like her doll. So damn symbolic. |
"A Couple Of Retards Fishing". One of the best from my sublime cretins period. |
"King Ptolemy Spits Into His Cup Of Milk". One of my favourites from my spitting ruler phase. It came after my vomiting tsars phase, and just before the urinating barons phase which is particularly popular among piss-fetishists. |
Watching my paintings day-in and day-out gives me headaches sometimes. The price of fame and Modern Art. |
"King Ptolemy Has Run Out Of Spit". This was my jubilee 35,000th painting. I am referring to my work from 1958. In 1959 the output fell by a couple thou due to illness. More on that later… |
"Beautiful Nude Woman With Bush". Degas once asked me what size pair of shoes I would buy this woman. He is a moron, plain and simple. The reason one foot is size 41 and the other 68 is simple: the smaller foot is closer to the eye (the viewer's) hence it appears to be smaller than the other one. No, wait… Forget it. Next picture. |
Belongs to my famous crappy breasts phase. I usually call it "16 Pubes" because that's how many pubic hairs there are, if you look closely. But don't look too close. Because if you do, you'll get sexually excited. (I know I do.) Whenever I look too closely at it I tend to call it "Oh, Mama! Oh Mama!!!", but eventually I calm down and then it's back to "16 Pubes Again"… Or "32 Pubes" - but that's only when I get drunk. |
"Facially Deformed Girl Taking Solace In Sailing". |
"Serenading A Vagina To Make It Ovulate". The blue man is young, but his wife of 38 is having trouble getting pregnant. I met a couple like that once and I could immediately empathize: I had a similar situation in the 50s when I married a woman 45 years my junior. I couldn't ovulate, either. And her terrible clarinet-playing only made things worse. Belongs to my caterpillar vagina period. |
A classic. And a major breakthrough in modern art. After I finished my crappy breasts phase, I went head-first into a new phase – the crappy detached breasts phase. Notice how the woman on the right is balancing the other woman's pair of breasts with her left leg stretched out. Should she lower the legs, the breasts would fall like a couple of marbles, roll down and get lost in the vast emptiness of the sand dunes. Hence the breasts symbolize their love, which lies on the shoulders – or a leg, in this case – of the dyke on the right. I briefly considered adding a third lesbo in there but I didn't know where to put her legs and arms – no space left. Note how calm the eyes of the right dyke are as compared to the tiny ant-eyes of her lover. The explanation is simple: the left dyke's eyes are close to the detached breasts and are keenly monitoring their safety. While the left dyke does trust her lover on the right to keep the leg straight hence keep the breasts from falling down, she still has a smidgeon of a doubt. This symbolizes the ultimate shakiness of any relationship, lesbo or otherwise. I call this masterpiece "Two Nude Chinese Lesbians Flapping Their Tongues In The Yellow Sand." The Chinese are yellow, see. |
"Woman Wiping Her Third Eye". A minor painting from my pointless purple sobbing phase. My ninth love, Fernande, the one and only real love in my life, posed for this even though she didn't want to at first. I explained that it takes me only three minutes to complete a work such as this but then she said she didn't feel well. It was so typical of these putanas: whenever they were pregnant, it was "I can't do this, I won't do that… nyah, nyah, nyah"… After an hour of heated debate I finally convinced her to pose. I told her to cry because I needed a crying face. She said she couldn't, so I thumped her into the stomach. She spontaneously had a miscarriage – out of the blue – but she finally cried. I never laughed so hard! I barely held the brush in my hand, thought I'd piss my pants from laughing… |
A day after Fernande's unlucky miscarriage I did this painting to cheer her up. It's called "The Unborn Screams For Placenta". She hated it. Her reaction kind of threw me off because she said a million times that she liked hens. I even dressed the hen like a ballerina, knowing her love for ballet. But putanas are all the same: you give them your artistic life and soul on a plate and they hurt you. |
"Hi, Genius". One day I wondered: "how far back into my childhood can my memories reach?" So I drew this instant classic of myself in my mother's womb, looking at my own image that was being reflected on the smooth, shiny surface of her liver. Nowadays doctors can look at the unborn, even film them and teach them to read (unless they're unborn Pollacks) - but there is one thing they cannot do: draw a brilliant portrait such as this one. |
"Nude Lady Provoking Men". A work of art that overlaps my crappy breasts phase with my monotonous parallel lines all over the place for no apparent reason period. The painting had a strange effect on me for a while; because I sleepwalk, I used to get up in the middle of the night, and french-kiss the painting right on those sensual light-blue lips. Only after I'd try to grab the tits as well would I finally wake up – no nipples, see. |
"Great-Looking Hot Stud In The Nude". My flower-in-the-hair phase. I had great trouble keeping the flower in the hair, however; it kept falling off, due to my fucking balding problem, so I placed it on my ear. When you're going to San Francisco put a flower in your hair, but when you're this bald better put it on an ear. And if you're going to Malaga put a knife on the other ear because they hate anything pansy there. Didn't last for longer than a few weeks: I took it off when a bee stung me in the head. Honestly, I know hippies are morons, but I wanted to make them accept me into one of their communes. After all, I am a Communist, albeit a very rich one. Nothing wrong with that. Absolutely nothing. I can be rich and left-wing! I heard they had great orgies in those communes. But when I saw footage of them eating each other's ear-wax I sort of had a temporary identity crisis and questioned my Marxist beliefs. Fortunately, that didn't last long: a beautiful thing happened in Cambodia in the late 70s and I was back to my good ol' extreme left-wing roots. |
This work of art is untitled to this day. If anyone can tell me what the hell is going on on this picture, apart from the piece of cheese, write to my agent: |
Hector Gonzales, El Representativo Del Arto De Picasso Y Otre Craposados, La Rua Del Carmina Burana 34/4, 14507 Espana. |
"El Toro Stupido". My proud, if unintentional, contribution to the meat industry. What do you get when you cross Cubism and a bull? You get the exact division of meat parts on him. The president of Spain's Butcher Society congratulated me for this work, saying that it inspired him to cut up bulls in new and different ways. |
Unfortunately, all that's left of "El Toro Stupido" is a picture of it. The original painting was desecrated by my son Claude at age 8. He calls it "El Jackolate". |
"Putanas". I did this in March 1884. Back then there were no porn channels, so one had to improvise. It's always had a deep effect on me. Listen, we'll continue in a minute. Gotta go to the john… |
A perennial favourite among my crappy breasts phase fans. "Beautiful Woman Throwing Fit In Toilet". The rumours that the encircled navel was Claude's doing quite frankly insults me. I encircled the navel, not that little prick. The circle is meant to signify that the woman is pregnant. Pregnant with a circle, a geometric form that dominates sex (breasts, nipples, asses, penis-tops: all are round, see), hence the logical and unavoidable conclusion that man, i.e. woman, must eventually conceive a circle. There was much debate in New York and Paris art circles (no pun intended) as to whether she is expecting a boy circle or a girl circle. I'll settle that once and for all: on second thought, no. I won't. The longer they argue about it the more the picture's value goes up! |
So what about the square in the upper left corner? Is she screaming at an object whose form is so utterly opposite to her children's own form? Is she protesting against a world of "squares" who won't except her revolutionary new brood? Perhaps. Or maybe she just can't open the window because it's stuck and it pisses her off. Despite her long arms which may be long but no hands on them! No hands: but circles instead! Get it?? Brilliant, aren't I. |
For a couple of weeks I was totally obsessed with serial-killers. This was my take on how a body reacts to being split in the middle by a madman with a large axe. |
Unfortunately, this despicable, desecrated version is also in circulation in many art books. Claude did this when I was away in Russia, doing a tour of Soviet gulags. I swear I wanted to kill the little fucker! Luckily for him, I remembered that I hadn't issued an insurance policy on his life yet. |
Left: "Ballerina In Need". Right: "Ballerina No Longer Needing". The drawing on the left shows that Claude's interference in my artistic endeavors wasn't all in vain. The clarity of my creative vision was all-too apparent in the left drawing. However, once I made a few changes the art became more succinct – and I emphasize the first half of this word in particular. Both sets of genitalos have cajones of different sizes, which is how it really is with real cajones – and I am nothing if not a realist. Hence my male genitalos show a maturity far beyond Claude's, who thought nothing more than to draw cajones that were the same size, which shows his inexperience with using the most basic art forms. I have drawn two sets of genitalos to represent a soprosistic duality in a virtual dialectic form. (Sorry, I don't have a clue what the fuck that means, either. It sounds great though.) People always ask me whether the lower curly black thing is an extension of the ballerina's upper dress or whether it is a bushido. My answer is always the same: have you ever seen an el penis fuck a ballerina dress? |
A total departure in my serial-killer period. The woman, in spite of being profoundly axed in the head, remains standing. This painting signaled the commencement of my walking zombie phase. |
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